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Transport of amino acids into the estrogen-primed uterus I. General characteristics of the uptake in vitro
Riggs, Thomas R.; Pan, Mary W.; Feng, Hsien-Wen
1968-01-03
Citation:Riggs, Thomas R., Pan, Mary W., Feng, Hsien W. (1968/01/03)."Transport of amino acids into the estrogen-primed uterus I. General characteristics of the uptake in vitro." Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes 150(1): 92-103. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/33225>
Abstract: The uptake of free amino acids by the immature rat uterus has been studied in vitro. 1. 1. The uptake of the model amino acid, [alpha]-aminoisobutyric acid, showed properties of active transport. It was saturable; it occurred against a gradient of the free amino acid; it could be decreased by metabolic inhibitors such as cyanide, 2,4-dinitrophenol and lack of O2; and it was temperature sensitive. It was also decreased by the presence of high levels of other amino acids or of K+, and by the absence of extracellular Na+.2. 2. Under appropriate conditions, 1 [mu]g estradiol injected into the rats could increase the uptake in vitro of [alpha]-aminoisobutyric acid, -serine, -alanine, glycine, -proline, -lysine, 1-aminocyclopentanecarboxylic acid, -valine and -norleucine. As short a time as 1 h in vivo was sufficient for this level of the hormone to stimulate uptake of [alpha]-aminoisobutyric acid, 1-aminocyclopentanecarboxylic acid, -alanine and -proline. A 10-6 M level of estradiol added in vitro stimulated [alpha]-aminoisobutyric acid uptake if incubation periods were extended to 6 h.3. 3. Estradiol increased uptake at all [alpha]-aminoisobutyric acid levels tested (0.3-10 mM). Approximation of kinetic constants showed that the hormone increased the [nu]max of [alpha]-aminoisobutyric acid uptake without altering its Km.