CONCENTRATIVE URIDINE TRANSPORT BY MURINE SPLENOCYTES - KINETICS, SUBSTRATE-SPECIFICITY, AND SODIUM DEPENDENCY

  • 15 May 1987
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 47 (10), 2614-2619
Abstract
A previous report from this laboratory indicated that the concentration of free uridine (Urd) in many normal murine tissues greatly exceeds that in plasma. We now report that Urd uptake by isolated murine splenocytes is concentrative, and that the rate of uptake from medium containing 10 to 500 .mu.M [3H]Urd conforms to a process that is saturable with a Km of 38.0 .+-. 4.1 (SE) .mu.M and Vmax of 2.70 .+-. 0.27 pmol/s/.mu.l cell water. Other ribosyl and deoxyribosyl pyrimidine nucleosides or their analogues were not concentrated by splenocytes; however, ribosyl and deoxyribosyl purine nucleosides and, to a lesser extent, deoxyuridine did inhibit Urd uptake. In this system Urd uptake was not inhibited by 1 .mu.M nitrobenzylthioinosine or 10 .mu.M dipyridamole but was significantly inhibited by 5 mM NaN3 or 250 .mu.M KCN. Transport of Urd involves Na+ cotransport as evidenced by complete inhibition when Na+ is replaced by Li+ in the incubation medium, and it is also inhibited by 3 mM ouabain. Active Urd transport coexists with the nonspecific, carrier mediated, facilitated diffusion of nucleosides as demonstrated by the inhibition of Urd efflux and thymidine influx in splenocyes by nitrobenzylthioinosine and dipyridamole. Under identical conditions, Urd entry into L1210 leukemia cells was nonconcentrative and non-Na+ dependent but inhibited by nitrobenzylthioinosine. That nucleosides enter most cultured neoplastic cell lines by facilitated diffusion and not the active transport mechanism for Urd confirms earlier findings and may represent an exploitable target for chemotherapy.