Artículos de revistas
Hypoxanthine transport in the guinea pig and human placenta is a carrier-mediated process that does not involve nucleoside transporters
Fecha
1994Registro en:
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1994;171 :111-7
00029378
10.1016/S0002-9378(94)70086-9
Autor
Barros, L. Felipe
Institución
Resumen
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to characterize the mechanisms involved in the placental
clearance of hypoxanthine.
STUDY DESIGN: Uptake of isotope-labeled compounds was measured in the in situ perfused guinea pig
placenta and in membrane vesicles isolated from the human syncytiotrophoblast.
RESULTS: In the guinea pig hypoxanthine uptake (from the fetal circulation) proceeded by a saturable
(Michaelis constant =90 f.\omol/L), sodium-dependent mechanism that was inhibited by 19 mmol/L
papaverine but not by 10 f.\omol/L nitrobenzylthioinosine or 10 mmol/L uridine. Uridine uptake was blocked
by nitrobenzylthioinosine but not by papaverine or 4 mmol/L hypoxanthine. In human brush-border
(maternal-facing) membrane vesicles hypoxanthine influx was sodium independent and best fitted to a
saturable (Michaelis constant 290 ± 45 f.\omol/L) plus a linear component. Saturable influx was blocked by
papaverine but not by nitrobenzylthioinosine. Uridine uptake was not affected by 4 mmol/L hypoxanthine.
Mediated hypoxanthine uptake by human basal (fetal-facing) membrane vesicles was not detected.
CONCLUSION: At both placental blood-tissue interfaces hypoxanthine transport occurs through specific
mechanisms that are different from the nucleoside transporters.