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Cation-dependent uptake of zinc in human fibroblasts

journal contribution
posted on 1996-01-01, 00:00 authored by Leigh AcklandLeigh Ackland, H J McArdle
The influence of K+ and Ca2+ on Zn2+ transport into cultured human fibroblasts was investigated. Zn2+ uptake was markedly reduced in the presence of both valinomycin and nigericin (electrogenic and electroneutral K+ ionophores, respectively), and by reduction in the transmembrane K+ gradient produced by replacement of extracellular K+ with Na+, suggesting that Zn2+ may be driven by a Zn2+/K+ counter-transport system. To test the counter-transport hypothesis, we used 86Rb as an analog of K+ for efflux studies. The rate of Rb+ efflux was 3760 times that of Zn2+ uptake, thus the component of K+ involved in the Zn2+ counter-transport system was only a small proportion of the total K+ efflux. In investigating the effect of Ca2+ on Zn2+ uptake, we identified two components: (1) a basal Zn2+ uptake pathway, independent of hormonal or growth factors which does not require extracellular Ca2+ and (2) a Ca(2+)-dependent mechanism. The absence of Ca2+ decreased Zn2+ uptake, while increasing extracellular Ca2+ stimulated Zn2+ uptake. The effect was mediated by Ca2+ influx as the ionophores A23187 and ionomycin also stimulated Zn2+ uptake. We could not ascribe the Ca2+ effect to known Ca2+ influx pathways. We conclude that Zn2+ uptake occurs by a K(+)-dependent process, possibly by Zn2+/K+ counter-transport and that a component of this is also Ca(2+)-dependent.

History

Journal

Biometals

Volume

9

Issue

1

Pagination

29 - 37

Publisher

Springer

Location

Dordrecht, Netherlands

ISSN

0966-0844

eISSN

1572-8773

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

1996, Rapid Science Publishers