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      Electrogenic bromosulfalein transport in isolated membrane vesicles: implementation in both animal and plant preparations for the study of flavonoid transporters.

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          Abstract

          Bromosulfalein is an organic anion dye used in the study of a variety of membrane carriers expressed in animal tissues and involved in transport of drugs and metabolites. The spectrophotometric assay of electrogenic bromosulfalein transport in membrane vesicles, isolated from various mammalian organs or tissues, enables to specifically measure the transport activity of bilitranslocase (TCDB 2.A.65.1.1). The latter is a bilirubin- and flavonoid-specific transporter expressed in rat liver, the organ where its function has been best characterized. The spectrophotometric assay of electrogenic bromosulfalein transport requires minimal volumes of membrane vesicles, is completed within 1 min, and, therefore, is a useful tool to screen the transporter spectrum of potential substrates, by testing them as reversible inhibitors of bromosulfalein transport kinetics. Furthermore, the assay enables to study the progress of time-dependent inactivation of bromosulfalein transport, caused by different protein-specific reagents, including specific anti-sequence antibodies. Inactivation can be retarded by the presence of substrates in a concentration-dependent manner, enabling to derive the dissociation constants of the transporter-substrate complex and thus to gain further insight into the transporter structure-function relationship. This assay, implemented in membrane vesicles isolated from plant organs, has paved the way to the discovery of homologues of bilitranslocase in plants.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Methods Mol. Biol.
          Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)
          Springer Nature America, Inc
          1940-6029
          1064-3745
          2010
          : 643
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Life Sciences, University of Trieste, Trieste, Italy.
          Article
          10.1007/978-1-60761-723-5_21
          20552460
          28e00ae7-10f9-437f-9bfc-fb3709ac95ad
          History

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