scholarly journals Structure-Affinity Relationships of Substrates for the Neutral Amino Acid Transport System in Rabbit Ileum

1974 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 443-467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Preston ◽  
John F. Schaeffer ◽  
Peter F. Curran

The apparent affinities of various amino acids for the neutral amino acid transport system in rabbit ileum were determined by measuring the inhibition of L-methionine-14C influx across the brush border membrane. The apparent affinity was very low for compounds lacking an α-amino group, compounds with the α-hydrogen substituted by a methyl group, D-compounds, compounds with tertiary branching in the side chain, compounds with either a positive or negative charge in the side chain, and in most cases, compounds with a hydrophilic moiety in the side chain. High apparent affinities were exhibited by compounds with unbranched carbon or carbon-sulfur side chains. Branched compounds such as valine and leucine exhibited affinities which correlate with binding of only the linear portion of the side chain. The calculated change in free energy of binding is 370 cal/mol/CH2 group which suggests the binding region for the side chain is partially hydrophobic. The affinities of families of analogues, derivatives of cysteine, methionine, serine, alanine, valine, and phenylalanine, correlate with their calculated octanol/water partition coefficients and are also correlated with apparent structural and electronic differences between families. The data permit a preliminary description of the functional geometry of the neutral amino acid transport site. The site contains a region for binding the α-amino group, α-carboxyl group, and side chain. The regions about the α-amino group and α-hydrogen are quite sterically limited. The side chain binding region is hydrophobic in nature and appears to be shallow, binding only the linear portion of branched or ring compounds.

1970 ◽  
Vol 56 (6) ◽  
pp. 673-691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Jacques Hajjar ◽  
Peter F. Curran

The specificity of the neutral amino acid transport system in the brush border was examined by studying the ability of amino acid analogues to inhibit the unidirectional influx of phenylalanine from mucosal solution into the cells. Effects were evaluated in terms of the affinity of various substrates for the amino acid site in the transport system. The affinity of amino acids for the site was proportional to the number of carbon atoms in the side chain. Electron-withdrawing substituents in the ring of phenylalanine increased affinity and electron-releasing groups decreased affinity. Removal of the α-amino group from phenylalanine decreased affinity by a factor of approximately 50 and removal of the carboxyl group decreased affinity 12-fold. Effects on affinity of variations in the side chain of the amino acid can be comparable in magnitude to that of the carboxyl group. The effect of sodium ion on the transport system appears to be similar for all compounds tested.


2010 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 117917211000200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katragadda Suresh ◽  
Zhu Xiadong ◽  
Talluri S. Ravi ◽  
Ashim K. Mitra

The aim of this study was to characterize the affinity and permeability patterns of the amino acid ester prodrugs of acyclovir (ACV), L-alanine-ACV (AACV), L-serine-ACV (SACV), L-serine-succinate-ACV (SSACV) and L-cysteine-ACV (CACV) on rabbit primary corneal epithelial cell culture (rPCEC) and on rabbit cornea. Amino acid prodrugs of acyclovir, AACV, SACV, SSACV and CACV were synthesized in our laboratory. Chemical hydrolysis in aqueous buffer, enzymatic hydrolysis in corneal homogenates and transport across freshly excised rabbit cornea of these prodrugs were studied. SSACV inhibited the uptake of [3H] L-alanine on rPCEC and across the intact rabbit cornea. Lineweaver-Burk plot transformation revealed competitive inhibition between L-alanine and SSACV. In corneal tissue homogenate, the half lives of SSACV, SACV and CACV (t1/2) were observed to be 3.5 ± 0.4, 9.2 ± 0.6 and 1.8 ± 0.1 hr respectively, whereas AACV was readily converted to the active parent drug acyclovir exhibiting complete degradation before 5 min. Interestingly translocation of SACV across cornea was inhibited in the presence of 5 mM arginine (~51%), a specific substrate for cationic transport system and in presence of BCH (~38%), a substrate specific for large neutral amino acid transport system (LAT) or cationic and neutral amino acid transport system (B0,+). SACV exhibited higher permeability across cornea along with excellent antiviral activity against herpes simplex virus (HSV-1) and varicella-zoster virus (VZV) in comparison to ACV. Recognition by multiple transporters, stability in corneal homogenate and changes in physico-chemical properties contributed to the increased permeability of SACV across cornea.


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