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Title: Organic cation transport by rat liver plasma membrane vesicles: studies with tetraethylammonium. Author: Moseley RH, Jarose SM, Permoad P. Journal: Am J Physiol; 1992 Nov; 263(5 Pt 1):G775-85. PubMed ID: 1443152. Abstract: Recently, an organic cation:H+ antiport was selectively identified on the sinusoidal domain of rat liver with the use of the endogenous organic cation N1-methylnicotinamide (NMN). Absence of NMN+:H+ exchange on canalicular membrane suggested that this transport process was primarily involved in organic cation uptake, leaving the mechanism(s) for organic cation secretion into bile unknown. To further define hepatic organic cation transport, we examined the characteristics of tetraethylammonium (TEA) transport in basolateral (blLPM) and canalicular (cLPM) rat liver plasma membrane vesicles. In cLPM vesicles, under voltage-clamped conditions, an outwardly directed H+ gradient stimulated [14C]TEA uptake compared with [14C]TEA uptake under pH-equilibrated conditions, consistent with electroneutral TEA:H+ exchange. The proton ionophore carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone had no effect on [14C]TEA uptake, demonstrating that pH-dependent [14C]TEA uptake was not the result of a H+ diffusion potential. In the absence of a pH gradient, the intravesicular presence of TEA trans-stimulated uptake of [14C]TEA. Procainamide ethobromide (PAEB), vecuronium, and tributylmethylammonium (TBuMA), organic cations selectively excreted in bile, cis-inhibited pH-dependent TEA uptake. In contrast, in blLPM vesicles, no pH gradient-dependent [14C]TEA uptake was demonstrated. Instead, basolateral [14C]TEA uptake was significantly stimulated by a valinomycin-induced intravesicular-negative K+ diffusion potential. Basolateral [14C]TEA uptake was also cis-inhibited by PAEB, vecuronium, and TBuMA, but not by NMN. Conversely, PAEB, vecuronium, and TBuMA had no effect on basolateral pH-dependent [3H]NMN uptake. These findings suggest that organic cation transport, with TEA as a model quaternary amine, across the canalicular membrane is driven by an electroneutral organic cation:H+ exchange and that the transport of certain organic cations across the basolateral membrane is via a carrier-mediated system stimulated by an inside-negative membrane potential.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]