- Dipeptide uptake by adenohypophysial folliculostellate cells.
Dipeptide uptake by adenohypophysial folliculostellate cells.
Dipeptide uptake was studied in primary cultures from rat anterior pituitaries by use of radiolabeled carnosine and the fluorescent dipeptide derivative beta-Ala-Lys-N epsilon-AMCA (AMCA is 7-amino-4-methylcoumarin-3-acetic acid). Fluorescence microscopic studies revealed that the reporter peptide specifically accumulated in the S-100 positive folliculostellate cells that do not produce any known hormone. The dipeptide derivative was taken up in unmetabolized form by an energy-dependent saturable process with apparent kinetic constants as follows: Michaelis constant, 19 microM; maximum velocity, 5.5 nmol.mg protein-1.h-1. This high-affinity transporter was strongly affected by inhibitors of sodium/proton exchangers and thus appeared to be driven by a proton gradient. Competition studies revealed that the peptide transporter exhibits broad substrate specificity with a preference for hydrophobic dipeptides. In contrast to free amino acids and the pseudotetrapeptide amastatin, tripeptides were also accepted. Compounds without an alpha- and beta-amino group, such as captopril, thiorphan, and benzylpenicillin, did not affect uptake of the reporter peptide, although they were substrates of the well-characterized intestinal and renal dipeptide transporters.