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Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695; and 2 Biology Department, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302-4010
In the first of two sets of experiments,
the lumen-to-cell and cell-to-bath transport rates for glycine were
measured in the isolated-perfused medullary pars recta (S3 cells) of
the rabbit proximal tubule at multiple luminal glycine concentrations
(0-2.0 mM). The lumen-to-cell transport of glycine was saturated,
which permitted the calculation of the transport maximum of
disappearance rate of glycine from the lumen
(pmol · min
1 · mm tubular
length
1), Km (mM), and
paracellular leak (pmol · min
1 · mm
tubular length
1 · mM
1) values for
this transport mechanism; these values were 4.3, 0.3, and 0.03, respectively. The cell-to-bath transport did not saturate but showed a
linear relationship to cellular glycine concentration, 0.58 pmol · min
1 · mm tubular
length
1 · mM
1. The second set of
experiments characterized the transport rate, cellular accumulation,
and metabolic rate of lumen-to-cell transported [3H]glycine in all segments (cell types) of the proximal
tubule, pars convoluta (S1 cells), cortical pars recta (S2 cells), and medullary pars recta (S3 cells). These proximal tubular segments were
isolated and perfused at a single glycine concentration of 11.2 µM.
From the results of this study and previous work (Barfuss DW and
Schafer JA. Am J Physiol 236: F149-F162, 1979), we
conclude that the axial heterogeneity for glycine lumen-to-cell and
cell-to-bath transport capacity extends to the medullary pars recta (S3
cells; S1 > S2 < S3 for lumen-to-cell transport and S1 > S2 > S3 for cell-to-bath transport). Also, we conclude that
lumen-to-cell transported glycine can be metabolized and its metabolic
rate displays axial heterogeneity (S1 > S2 > S3). The
physiological significances of these transport and metabolic
characteristics of the S3 cell type permits the medullary pars recta to
effectively recover glycine from very low luminal glycine
concentrations and makes glycine available for protective and
maintenance metabolism of the medullary pars recta.
kidney; glutathione; nephron
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