Functional Characterization of Human Aquaporin 9 as a Facilitative Glycerol Carrier
doi: 10.2133/dmpk.23.279
pmid: 18762715
Functional Characterization of Human Aquaporin 9 as a Facilitative Glycerol Carrier
The mechanism of glycerol transport by human aquaporin 9 (hAQP9), which is a liver-specific AQP water channel and can also transport glycerol, was investigated by using the Xenopus laevis oocyte expression system. It was found that specific glycerol uptake by hAQP9 was concentration-dependent (saturable) at 25 degrees C, conforming to the Michaelis-Menten kinetics with the maximum transport rate (J(max)) of 0.84 pmol/min/oocyte and the Michaelis constant (K(m)) of 9.2 microM, and temperature-dependent, being reduced by about 70% when temperature was lowered from 25 degrees C to 4 degrees C. Such dependences on concentration and temperature are characteristic of a carrier-mediated type of mechanism rather than a channel type, which is expected not to depend on them. Furthermore, several glycerol-related compounds, such as monoacetin, were found to specifically inhibit hAQP9-mediated glycerol uptake, indicating a possibility of competition with glycerol. hAQP9-mediated glycerol uptake was, however, found not to require Na+. All these results suggest that hAQP9 functions as a facilitative carrier for glycerol, although it had been believed to function as a channel. Findings in the present study provide novel insight into its glycerol-transporting mechanism and would help exploring a possibility that hAQP9 inhibitors might help lower blood glucose level by reducing gluconeogenesis by limiting hepatic glycerol uptake.
- Nagoya City University Japan
- Aichi Gakuin University Japan
Glycerol, Sodium, Temperature, Biological Transport, Aquaporins, Xenopus laevis, Liver, Oocytes, Animals, Humans, Female, Carrier Proteins
Glycerol, Sodium, Temperature, Biological Transport, Aquaporins, Xenopus laevis, Liver, Oocytes, Animals, Humans, Female, Carrier Proteins
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