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The human tumour suppressor gene SLC5A8 expresses a Na+–monocarboxylate cotransporter
Authors:Michael J Coady  Min-Hwang Chang  Francois M Charron  Consuelo Plata  Bernadette Wallendorff  Jerome Frank Sah  Sanford D Markowitz  Michael F Romero  Jean-Yves Lapointe
Institution:Groupe d'étude des protéines membranaires, Pavillon Paul-G-Desmarais, 2960 chemin de la Tour, Universitéde Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada, H3T 1J4;Physiology and Biophysics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA;Ireland Cancer Center and Department of Medicine, University Hospitals of Cleveland and Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA;Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Abstract:The orphan cotransport protein expressed by the SLC5A8 gene has been shown to play a role in controlling the growth of colon cancers, and the silencing of this gene is a common and early event in human colon neoplasia. We expressed this protein in Xenopus laevis oocytes and have found that it transports small monocarboxylic acids. The electrogenic activity of the cotransporter, which we have named SMCT (sodium monocarboxylate transporter), was dependent on external Na+ and was compatible with a 3 : 1 stoichiometry between Na+ and monocarboxylates. A portion of the SMCT-mediated current was also Cl? dependent, but Cl? was not cotransported. SMCT transports a variety of monocarboxylates (similar to unrelated monocarboxylate transport proteins) and most transported monocarboxylates demonstrated K m values near 100 μ m , apart from acetate and d -lactate, for which the protein showed less affinity. SMCT was strongly inhibited by 1 m m probenecid or ibuprofen. In the absence of external substrate, a Na+-independent leak current was also observed to pass through SMCT. SMCT activity was strongly inhibited after prolonged exposure to high external concentrations of monocarboxylates. The transport of monocarboxylates in anionic form was confirmed by the observation of a concomitant alkalinization of the cytosol. SMCT, being expressed in colon and kidney, represents a novel means by which Na+, short-chain fatty acids and other monocarboxylates are transported in these tissues. The significance of a Na+–monocarboxylate transporter to colon cancer presumably stems from the transport of butyrate, which is well known for having anti-proliferative and apoptosis-inducing activity in colon epithelial cells.
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