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Title: Lithium interactions with Na+-coupled inorganic phosphate cotransporters: insights into the mechanism of sequential cation binding. Author: Andrini O, Meinild AK, Ghezzi C, Murer H, Forster IC. Journal: Am J Physiol Cell Physiol; 2012 Feb 01; 302(3):C539-54. PubMed ID: 22075694. Abstract: Type IIa/b Na(+)-coupled inorganic phosphate cotransporters (NaPi-IIa/b) are considered to be exclusively Na(+) dependent. Here we show that Li(+) can substitute for Na(+) as a driving cation. We expressed NaPi-IIa/b in Xenopus laevis oocytes and performed two-electrode voltage-clamp electrophysiology and uptake assays to investigate the effect of external Li(+) on their kinetics. Replacement of 50% external Na(+) with Li(+) reduced the maximum transport rate and the rate-limiting plateau of the P(i)-induced current began at less hyperpolarizing potentials. Simultaneous electrophysiology and (22)Na uptake on single oocytes revealed that Li(+) ions can substitute for at least one of the three Na(+) ions necessary for cotransport. Presteady-state assays indicated that Li(+) ions alone interact with the empty carrier; however, the total charge displaced was 70% of that with Na(+) alone, or when 50% of the Na(+) was replaced by Li(+). If Na(+) and Li(+) were both present, the midpoint potential of the steady-state charge distribution was shifted towards depolarizing potentials. The charge movement in the presence of Li(+) alone reflected the interaction of one Li(+) ion, in contrast to 2 Na(+) ions when only Na was present. We propose an ordered binding scheme for cotransport in which Li(+) competes with Na(+) to occupy the putative first cation interaction site, followed by the cooperative binding of one Na(+) ion, one divalent P(i) anion, and a third Na(+) ion to complete the carrier loading. With Li(+) bound, the kinetics of subsequent partial reactions were significantly altered. Kinetic simulations of this scheme support our experimental data.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]