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The functional and physical relationship between the DRA bicarbonate transporter and carbonic anhydrase II

Authors :
Joseph R. Casey
Claudiu T. Supuran
Nathan J. Brown
Deborah Sterling
Source :
American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology. 283:C1522-C1529
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2002.

Abstract

COOH-terminal cytoplasmic tails of chloride/bicarbonate anion exchangers (AE) bind cytosolic carbonic anhydrase II (CAII) to form a bicarbonate transport metabolon, a membrane protein complex that accelerates transmembrane bicarbonate flux. To determine whether interaction with CAII affects the downregulated in adenoma (DRA) chloride/bicarbonate exchanger, anion exchange activity of DRA-transfected HEK-293 cells was monitored by following changes in intracellular pH associated with bicarbonate transport. DRA-mediated bicarbonate transport activity of 18 ± 1 mM H+equivalents/min was inhibited 53 ± 2% by 100 mM of the CAII inhibitor, acetazolamide, but was unaffected by the membrane-impermeant carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, 1-[5-sulfamoyl-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-yl-(aminosulfonyl-4-phenyl)]-2,6-dimethyl-4-phenyl-pyridinium perchlorate. Compared with AE1, the COOH-terminal tail of DRA interacted weakly with CAII. Overexpression of a functionally inactive CAII mutant, V143Y, reduced AE1 transport activity by 61 ± 4% without effect on DRA transport activity (105 ± 7% transport activity relative to DRA alone). We conclude that cytosolic CAII is required for full DRA-mediated bicarbonate transport. However, DRA differs from other bicarbonate transport proteins because its transport activity is not stimulated by direct interaction with CAII.

Details

ISSN :
15221563 and 03636143
Volume :
283
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....95350aa1a7c328627b0cc77d3af1b4d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00115.2002