Peptide aminonitrogen transport by the lactating rat mammary gland
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文摘
Recent studies have shown that the lactating mammary gland is able to utilize plasma-derived dipeptides for milk protein synthesis. However, it was not clear whether the peptides were hydrolysed followed by uptake of the constituent amino acids or were taken up intact. In view of this, we have designed experiments to investigate (a) whether the lactating rat mammary gland is capable of transporting hydrolysis-resistant dipeptides and (b) whether or not mammary cells are able to hydrolyse peptides, including glutathione, extracellularly. The uptake of the hydrolysis-resistant dipeptides d-[3H]Phe-l-Gln and d-[3H]Phe-l-Glu by the perfused rat mammary gland was low. Concomitant addition of l-Leu-l-Ala (50 mM) had no effect on the clearance of either labelled dipeptide suggesting that the small, albeit significant, uptake of the dipeptides is not via a high affinity peptide transporter (PepT1/PepT2). All anionic dipeptides tested (l-Glu-l-Ala, l-Asp-l-Ala, l-Ala-l-Asp, l-Asp-Gly, Gly-l-Asp and Gly-l-Glu) with the exception of d-Phe-l-Glu were able to trans-accelerate the efflux of labelled d-aspartate from preloaded rat mammary tissue (explants and perfused mammary gland). It appears that these peptides were being hydrolysed extracellularly followed by the uptake of free anionic amino acids via the mammary tissue high affinity, Na+-dependent anionic amino acid carrier operating in the exchange mode. Glutathione was able to trans-accelerate d-aspartate efflux from lactating rat mammary tissue in a fashion which was sensitive to the peptidase inhibitor acivicin. This suggests that γ-glutamyltranspeptidase hydrolyses glutathione to produce l-glutamate which is subsequently transported via the high-affinity anionic amino acid carrier. Hydrolysis of peptides followed by uptake of the constituent amino acids may provide an important source of amino acids for milk protein synthesis.

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