1. Academic Validation
  2. Human intestinal H+/peptide cotransporter. Cloning, functional expression, and chromosomal localization

Human intestinal H+/peptide cotransporter. Cloning, functional expression, and chromosomal localization

  • J Biol Chem. 1995 Mar 24;270(12):6456-63. doi: 10.1074/jbc.270.12.6456.
R Liang 1 Y J Fei P D Prasad S Ramamoorthy H Han T L Yang-Feng M A Hediger V Ganapathy F H Leibach
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta 30912-2100.
Abstract

In mammalian small intestine, a H(+)-coupled peptide transporter is responsible for the absorption of small Peptides arising from digestion of dietary proteins. Recently a cDNA clone encoding a H+/peptide cotransporter has been isolated from a rabbit intestinal cDNA library (Fei, Y.J., Kanai, Y., Nussberger, S., Ganapathy, V., Leibach, F.H., Romero, M.F., Singh, S.K., Boron, W. F., and Hediger, M. A. (1994) Nature 368, 563-566). Screening of a human intestinal cDNA library with a probe derived from the rabbit H+/peptide cotransporter cDNA resulted in the identification of a cDNA which when expressed in HeLa cells or in Xenopus laevis oocytes induced H(+)-dependent peptide transport activity. The predicted protein consists of 708 Amino acids with 12 membrane-spanning domains and two putative sites for protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation. The cDNA-induced transport process accepts dipeptides, tripeptides, and amino Beta-lactam Antibiotics but not free Amino acids as substrates. The human H+/peptide cotransporter exhibits a high degree of homology (81% identity and 92% similarity) to the rabbit H+/peptide cotransporter. But surprisingly these transporters show only a weak homology to the H(+)-coupled peptide transport proteins present in bacteria and yeast. Chromosomal assignment studies with somatic cell hybrid analysis and in situ hybridization have located the gene encoding the cloned human H+/peptide cotransporter to chromosome 13 q33-->q34.

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