The epithelial cells of the integument of body, arms and tentacles of Sepia officinalis present on their apical membrane a well-organised brush border and show the morphological and histochemical characteristics of a typical absorptive epithelium. The ability of the integument to absorb amino acids was investigated both in the arms incubated in vitro and in a purified preparation of brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV). Autoradiographic pictures of the integument after incubation of the arms in sea-water with or without sodium, showed that proline intake was Na+-dependent, whereas leucine intake appeared to be a largely cation-independent process. Time course experiments of labelled leucine, proline and lysine uptakes in BBMV evidenced that these amino acids are accumulated within the vesicles in the presence of an inwardly directed sodium gradient. The sodium-driven accumulation proves that cationic and neutral amino acids are taken up by the apical membrane of the epithelium of Sepia integument through a secondary active mechanism. For leucine, a 90% inhibition of the uptake was recorded in the presence of a large excess of the substrate. In agreement with the autoradiography results, an analysis of the cation specificity transport in BBMV showed that leucine uptake had a low cation specificity, whereas lysine and proline uptakes were Na+-dependent. An excess of lysine and proline, which share with alanine two different transport systems in the gill epithelium of marine bivalves, reduced eucine uptake. The possible role of the absorptive ability of the integument in a carnivorous mollusc is discussed

de Eguileor, M., Leonardi, M., Grimaldi, A., Tettamanti, G., Fiandra, L., Giordana, B., et al. (2000). Integumental amino acid uptake in a carnivorous predator mollusc (Sepia officinalis, Cephalopoda). TISSUE & CELL, 32(5), 389-398 [10.1054/tice.2000.0127].

Integumental amino acid uptake in a carnivorous predator mollusc (Sepia officinalis, Cephalopoda)

Fiandra, L;
2000

Abstract

The epithelial cells of the integument of body, arms and tentacles of Sepia officinalis present on their apical membrane a well-organised brush border and show the morphological and histochemical characteristics of a typical absorptive epithelium. The ability of the integument to absorb amino acids was investigated both in the arms incubated in vitro and in a purified preparation of brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV). Autoradiographic pictures of the integument after incubation of the arms in sea-water with or without sodium, showed that proline intake was Na+-dependent, whereas leucine intake appeared to be a largely cation-independent process. Time course experiments of labelled leucine, proline and lysine uptakes in BBMV evidenced that these amino acids are accumulated within the vesicles in the presence of an inwardly directed sodium gradient. The sodium-driven accumulation proves that cationic and neutral amino acids are taken up by the apical membrane of the epithelium of Sepia integument through a secondary active mechanism. For leucine, a 90% inhibition of the uptake was recorded in the presence of a large excess of the substrate. In agreement with the autoradiography results, an analysis of the cation specificity transport in BBMV showed that leucine uptake had a low cation specificity, whereas lysine and proline uptakes were Na+-dependent. An excess of lysine and proline, which share with alanine two different transport systems in the gill epithelium of marine bivalves, reduced eucine uptake. The possible role of the absorptive ability of the integument in a carnivorous mollusc is discussed
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Alanine; Amino Acids; Animals; Biological Transport; Cations; Immunohistochemistry; Leucine; Lysine; Microscopy, Electron; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Microvilli; Mollusca; Proline; Sodium; Time Factors
English
2000
32
5
389
398
none
de Eguileor, M., Leonardi, M., Grimaldi, A., Tettamanti, G., Fiandra, L., Giordana, B., et al. (2000). Integumental amino acid uptake in a carnivorous predator mollusc (Sepia officinalis, Cephalopoda). TISSUE & CELL, 32(5), 389-398 [10.1054/tice.2000.0127].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/218193
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