4.6 Article

Red Fluorescent Protein pH Biosensor to Detect Concentrative Nucleoside Transport

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 284, Issue 31, Pages 20499-20511

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M109.019042

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
  4. Alberta Ingenuity
  5. National Cancer Institute of Canada
  6. Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research (AHFMR)

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Human concentrative nucleoside transporter, hCNT3, mediates Na+/nucleoside and H+/nucleoside co-transport. We describe a new approach to monitor H+/uridine co-transport in cultured mammalian cells, using a pH-sensitive monomeric red fluorescent protein variant, mNectarine, whose development and characterization are also reported here. A chimeric protein, mNectarine fused to the N terminus of hCNT3 (mNect.hCNT3), enabled measurement of pH at the intracellular surface of hCNT3. mNectarine fluorescence was monitored in HEK293 cells expressing mNect.hCNT3 or mNect. hCNT3-F563C, an inactive hCNT3 mutant. Free cytosolic mNect, mNect. hCNT3, and the traditional pH-sensitive dye, BCECF, reported cytosolic pH similarly in pH-clamped HEK293 cells. Cells were incubated at the permissive pH for H+-coupled nucleoside transport, pH 5.5, under both Na+-free and Na+-containing conditions. In mNect.hCNT3-expressing cells (but not under negative control conditions) the rate of acidification increased in media containing 0.5 mM uridine, providing the first direct evidence for H+-coupled uridine transport. At pH 5.5, there was no significant difference in uridine transport rates (coupled H+ flux) in the presence or absence of Na+ (1.09 +/- 0.11 or 1.18 +/- 0.32 mM min(-1), respectively). This suggests that in acidic Na+-containing conditions, 1 Na+ and 1 H+ are transported per uridine molecule, while in acidic Na+-free conditions, 1 H+ alone is transported/uridine. In acid environments, including renal proximal tubule, H+/nucleoside co-transport may drive nucleoside accumulation by hCNT3. Fusion of mNect to hCNT3 provided a simple, self-referencing, and effective way to monitor nucleoside transport, suggesting an approach that may have applications in assays of transport activity of other H+-coupled transport proteins.

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