The energetics of reserpine binding to the bovine adrenal biogenic amine transporter suggest that H+ ion translocation converts the transporter to a form which binds reserpine essentially irreversibly. Reserpine binding to bovine adrenal chromaffin granule membrane vesicles is accelerated by generation of a transmembrane pH difference (delta pH) (interior acid) or electrical potential (delta psi) (interior positive). Both components of the electrochemical H+ potential (delta mu H+) must be dissipated to block reserpine binding, and generation of either one stimulates the binding rate. Reserpine binding is less dependent than amine transport on the delta pH, suggesting that translocation of fewer H+ ions is required to expose the high-affinity site than are required for net transport. Bound reserpine dissociates very slowly, if at all, from the transporter. Binding is stable to 1% cholate, 1.5% Triton X-100, 1 M SCN-, and 8 M urea, but sodium dodecyl sulfate (0.035%) and high temperatures (100 degrees C) released bound reserpine, indicating that binding is noncovalent. The results raise the possibility that the transporter, by translocating one H+ ion outward down its concentration gradient, is converted to a form that can either transport a neutral substrate molecule inward or occlude reserpine in a dead-end complex.
The catecholamine transporter from bovine chromaffin granules has been solubilized by using low concentrations of sodium cholate in the presence of phospholipids. The functional solubilized protein has been incorporated into liposomes after removal of the detergent either by gel filtration or by dialysis. Reserpine-sensitive accumulation against a concentration gradient is achieved by artifically imposing a pH gradient across the membrane. In the reconstituted system adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) serves as an energy source only at higher detergent concentrations. The proton-translocating adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) is solubilized in parallel with the increasing efficiency of ATP as an energy source. Several criteria are proposed to distinguish between carrier-mediated (reserpine sensitive) and unmediated transport in the reconstituted system. The reserpine-sensitive process shows affinity and ss presented in this communication provide further support for the contention that concentrative uptake in biogenic amine storage vesicles is driven by a transmembrane pH gradient, which, in the native system, is generated by a proton-translocating ATPase. Moreover, the assays described provide a tool for the isolation and purification of the transport protein.
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