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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Impaired trafficking of choline transporter-like protein-1 at plasma membrane and inhibition of choline transport in THP-1 monocyte-derived macrophages.

The present study investigates choline transport processes and regulation of choline transporter-like protein-1 (CTL1) in human THP-1 monocytic cells and phorbol myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-differentiated macrophages. Choline uptake is saturable and therefore protein-mediated in both cell types, but its transport characteristics change soon after treatments with PMA. The maximal rate of choline uptake intrinsic to monocytic cells is greatly diminished in differentiated macrophages as demonstrated by alterations in V(max) values from 1,973 +/- 118 to 380 +/- 18 nmol x mg(-1) x min(-1), when the binding affinity did not change significantly (K(m) values 56 +/- 8 and 53 +/- 6 microM, respectively). Treatments with hemicholinim-3 effectively inhibit most of the choline uptake, establishing that a choline-specific transport protein rather than a general transporter is responsible for the observed kinetic parameters. mRNA screening for the expression of various transporters reveals that CTL1 is the most plausible candidate that possesses the described kinetic and inhibitory properties. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting analyses at various times after PMA treatments further demonstrate that the disappearance of CTL1 protein from the cell surface follows the same trend as the reduction in choline uptake. Importantly, the loss of functional CTL1 from the cell surface occurs without significant changes in total CTL1 protein or its mRNA level indicating that an impaired CTL1 trafficking is the key contributing factor to the reduced choline uptake, subsequent to the PMA-induced THP-1 differentiation to macrophages.[1]

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