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Molecular Pharmacology, Vol 7, 581-592, Copyright © 1971 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

Uptake, Storage, and Distribution of Amines in Bovine Adrenal Medullary Vesicles

THEODORE A. SLOTKIN 1 and NORMAN KIRSHNER 1

1 Department of Biochemistry, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27706

The biphasic nature of the efflux of amines from isolated adrenal storage vesicles suggests that there are two storage pools. The uptake, storage, and distribution of 11 amines were determined to elucidate the structural specificity of the uptake mechanism and storage system in each pool. The half-times for efflux of newly incorporated amines from the two pools were 5 min ("fast pool") and 0.5-3 hr ("slow pool"). Both pools were located in the heavy vesicle fraction, as demonstrated by density gradient centrifugation of vesicles labeled with 14C-epinephrine (a slow pool seeker) and 3H-metaraminol (a fast pool seeker). The following moieties increased fast pool uptake when substituted on the basic beta-phenylethylamine structure: p-hydroxyl, m-methoxy, and agr-methyl. Slow pool uptake was increased by p- and m-hydroxyl substitution and by replacement of the phenyl ring with 5-hydroxyindole. beta-Hydroxyl and catechol groups contributed to the stability of storage in the slow pool, but not in the fast pool. Amines which enter the slow pool were more dependent on ATP-Mg2+-stimulated uptake (and therefore more sensitive to blockade of uptake by reserpine) than were amines which primarily enter the fast pool. Other amines inhibited the uptake of epinephrine in both pools, and the slow pool uptake mechanism was saturated at lower substrate concentrations. beta-Phenylethylamine was not taken up into either pool, but inhibited epinephrine incorporation, suggesting that the uptake process is independent of the storage process. Binding of amines to chromogranins cannot account for the storage of amines in either pool, but may contribute to the specificity of binding in the slow pool.

Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENT The authors wish to thank Mrs. Dorothy Kamin for her technical assistance.

Submitted on May 13, 1971




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