The organic anion p-aminohippurate (PAH) is specifically secreted by the renal proximal tubule. The possibility was examined that the probenecid sensitive PAH transport system (which is involved in this secretory process in renal proximal tubule cells in vivo) is retained in primary cultures of rabb
UTILIZATION OF AMINO ACIDS IN GROWING KIDNEY PROXIMAL TUBULE CELL CULTURES
β Scribed by Abdi Rashid Ali; Peter J. Evans
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 238 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1065-6995
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The growth of rat kidney proximal tubule cells was monitored continuously by the cellular incorporation of [methylβ^14^C] thymidine using scintillating microplates. The radioisotope had no effect on cell proliferation over a 5 day period, neither was it extensively converted to thymine. Leibovitz Lβ15 medium supplemented with bicarbonate proved a good growth medium and its high levels of carbohydrates and amino acids facilitated the appearance of intermediates in the cells' metabolism of additional radioactive amino acids. Kidney proximal tubule cells had a greater potential to process amino acids than BHKβ21 cells. The utilization of amino acids by proximal tubule cells differed from that of other organs. The amino acids could be classified into three classes. Members of the first type were only used for protein synthesis (arginine, lysine, histidine and tyrosine). The second class of amino acids yielded only one or two metabolites (leucine and isoleucine), while the last type gave more than two metabolites (alanine, aspartate, glycine, methionine, proline and valine).
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract We have assessed the impact of increasing oxygen availability on cellular phenotype expression of rabbit proximal tubule cells in primary culture developed with variable glucose and/or insulin contents. To mitigate hypoxia at the cell/medium interface, cells were shaken for the whole cu
The properties of primary rabbit kidney proximal tubule cells in glucose-free serum-free medium have been examined. Primary rabbit kidney proximal tubule cells were observed to grow at the same rate, 1 .O doublingsiday, both in glucosefree and in glucose-supplemented medium. Growth in glucose-free m
## Abstract Two transport systems for neutral amino acids have been characterised in LLCβPK~1~ cells. The first, which transport alanine in a sodiumβdependent manner, also mediates alanine exchange and is preferentially inhibited by serine, cysteine, and Ξ±βaminoβnβbutyric acid. This system resemble
## Abstract A cell line from canine kidney (MDCK) was studied in hypotonic conditions to determine the transport mechanisms involved during regulatory volume decrease (RVD). It was found that RVD was related to a loss of K^+^, Cl^β^ and amino acids. Membrane potential measurements during RVD have s