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Title: Kinetic analysis of glutamate transport by the miniswine choroid plexus in vitro. Author: Kim CS, Virella A, Braunberg RC, Ross IA, Matthews RN, Johnson W, Friedman L. Journal: Brain Res; 1996 Feb 12; 709(1):59-64. PubMed ID: 8869557. Abstract: Transport of glutamic acid by the choroid plexus, the blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barrier, was investigated by using the isolated choroid plexi from the fourth (FVCP) and lateral ventricles (LVCP) of the young adult miniswine in vitro. Glutamic acid uptake was very pronounced, with concentrations 7-fold (LVCP) and 2.4-fold (FVCP) higher in tissue than in medium after only 5 min of incubation with 1 microM glutamic acid. Tissue/medium ratios reached steady state by 15 min at 30-fold (LVCP) and 11-fold (FVCP). Uptake was energy-dependent and inhibited by ouabain and hypothermia. L-Aspartic acid was shown to be inhibitory in a concentration-dependent manner, suggesting that it shares a common transport system, whereas neither octanoic acid nor okadaic acid (transported by a separate fatty acid system) inhibited glutamic acid transport. At the same temperature, the labeled metabolite of glutamate (glutamine) in the tissue was 64.7%, 73.2%, and 72.5% of total radioactivity at 5, 30, and 60 min, respectively. The estimated Km values for glutamate uptake by the choroid plexus are 264 microM (FVCP) and 196 microM (LVCP); Vmax values are 87 (FVCP) and 147 (LVCP) nmol/g/min, respectively. These results indicate that, in addition to the metabolism of glutamate to glutamine, an active uptake mechanism is present in the choroid plexus of miniswine which may serve to regulate glutamic acid concentration in the CSF.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]