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Transcellular Transport of Benzole Acid Across Caco-2 Cells by a pH-Dependent and Carrier-Mediated Transport Mechanism
Authors:Tsuji  Akira  Takanaga  Hitomi  Tamai  Ikumi  Terasaki  Tetsuya
Affiliation:(1) Department of Pharmaceutics, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kanazawa University, Takara-machi 13-1, Kanazawa 920, Japan
Abstract:The pH-dependent transcellular transport of [14 C]benzoic acid across a Caco-2 cell monolayer is shown to be mediated by a monocarboxylic acid-specific carrier-mediated transport system, localized on the apical membrane. Evidence for the carrier-mediated transport of benzoic acid includes (a) the significant temperature and concentration dependence, (b) the metabolic energy dependence, (c) the inhibition by unlabeled benzoic acid and other monocarboxylic acids, (d) countertransport effects on the uptake of [14C]benzoic acid, and (e) effects of a proteinase (papain) and amino acid-modifying reagents. Furthermore, since carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone and nigericin significantly inhibited the transport of [14C] benzoic acid, the direct driving force for benzoic acid transport is suggested to be the inwardly directed proton gradient. From these results, together with previous observations using intestinal brush border membrane vesicles, the pH dependence of the transcellular transport of certain organic weak acids across Caco-2 cells is considered to result mainly from a proton gradient-dependent, carrier-mediated transport mechanism, rather than passive diffusion according to the pH-partition theory.
Keywords:benzoic acid  Caco-2 cell  Monocarboxylic acid  pH-dependent carrier-mediated transport  pH-partition theory  proton-coupled transport
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