ABSTRACf. Accumulation of the fj-amino acid taurine is higher in adult rat renal brush border membrane vesicles than in nursing animals, which relates to a higher initial rate Vmax. A low sulfur amino acid diet increases and a 3% taurine diet reduces the Vmax of Nat-taurine cotransport in brush border membrane vesicles at all ages after 7 days as compared to values on a normal diet. To determine if changes in membrane fluidity account for these developmental and adaptive events, the fluorescent probe 1,6-diphenyl-l,3,5-hexatriene was used to measure fluorescence anisotropy. A two-component, single break curve fit the data over the range 4 to 56°C. Values for the break temperature centered around 23°C, not different than a break temperature determined in adult membranes. The values for membrane polarization range from 0.311 to 0.329 in membranes from 7-, 14-, and 21-day-old pups exposed to each of the three diets, significantly lower than the value in adult membranes (p < 0.02). The slopes of each component, equivalent to the apparent energy of activation, did not differ in relation to diet. The ontogenic changes in taurine uptake by brush border membrane vesicles related to the exposure to different dietary sulfur amino acid levels are not related to changes in membrane fluidity using 1,6-diphenyl-l,3,5-hexatriene as a probe. However, there is a decrease in fluidity with age. Total phospholipid content falls postweaning, and the percent of total content of phosphatidyl choline and glycerol phosphate fall, and phosphatidyl serine and ethanolamine rise as the rat ages. The results indicate that alterations in the phospholipid composition occur during the process of maturation and that changes in the fluidity of brush border membranes may account for maturational differences in Nat-dependent taurine transport. (Pediatr Res 22: 163-167,1987) Immature animals of virtually all mammalian species have a "physiologic" generalized aminoaciduria which results in excretion of a higher fraction of the filtered amino acid load of all amino acid classes (1,2). Our laboratory has focused on physiologic factors that modify the development of amino acid transport systems in order to better understand the processes by which these transport sites achieve a mature transport profile (3-7). For an appropriate transport probe , we have used the l3-amino acid taurine, since it is relevant in the nutrition of young animals (8) and since one can manipulate the dietary level of sulfur amino acids to alter the renal handling of taurine (5,9-14). The Na"-dependent accumulation of taurine by BBMV isolated from nursing animals shows enhanced uptake in BBMV prepared from pups whose mothers art. fed a LTD and reduced in membranes from pups fed a HTD when compared to membranes from pups whose dams were fed a NTO (15). Taurinuria is greater in nursing or weanling pups as compared to adult controls, but animals of all ages (7, 14, 21, 28 day and adult) respond to exposure to the LTO by urinary conservation of taurine and to the HTD by hyperexcre...