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Background
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Thiamine is a water-soluble, B-complex vitamin that
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cannot be synthesized by mammals, and thus thiamine can be
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obtained only from dietary intake. This can lead to severe
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consequences in humans when thiamine is limiting; thiamine
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deficiency may result in beriberi and the Wernike-Korsakoff
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syndrome [ 1 2 ] . Being positively charged and present in
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relatively low plasma concentrations, thiamine movement
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across cellular membranes requires transporters. Upon being
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taken up by a cell, thiamine is rapidly diphosphorylated by
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thiamine diphosphokinase to give thiamine diphosphate
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(ThDP) [ 3 ] . Thus, thiamine represents only a few percent
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of the total cellular thiamine/thiamine phosphate
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derivatives. ThDP serves as a cofactor for several enzymes
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that are found both in the cytosol (transketolase) and
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mitochondria (α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex being
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the most studied example). The intracellular concentration
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of ThDP has been estimated at 30 μM, with only about 7
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percent being free cytosolic and the remainder being
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enzyme-bound with much of this within mitochondria [ 4 5 ]
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. Previous findings indicate a complex, cell-type dependent
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regulation of compartmentalization and intracellular pools
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of thiamine and its phosphorylated derivatives in response
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to fluctuating extracellular thiamine levels [ 4 5 6 ] .
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Hence, thiamine transport, including that by mitochondria,
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is of interest.
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Thiamine entry into mammalian cells occurs by a
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saturable, high affinity transporter that is deficient in
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humans with thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia (TRMA)
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[ 7 8 9 10 11 12 ] . Thiamine uptake by mitochondria has
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been demonstrated [ 13 ] , yet thiamine diphosphokinase is
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cytosolic and mitochondria cannot convert thiamine to ThDP
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[ 14 15 16 ] . Barile and coworkers demonstrated saturable
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uptake of ThDP by rat liver mitochondria characterized by a
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K
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m of around 20 μM. Although the
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estimated concentration, in mice and human cells, of
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intracellular ThDP is about 30 μM, much of this is found in
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a low turnover pool representing enzyme-bound ThDP [ 4 17 ]
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. The estimated concentration of free cytosolic ThDP
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available for intracellular transport is about 10% of the
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total concentration and thus 2 to 3 μM [ 4 17 18 ] . Hence
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the physiological significance of the mitochondrial ThDP
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uptake just decribed is uncertain. Within mitochondria,
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ThDP can be converted to thiamine monophosphate [ 19 ] .
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Thiamine or ThDP entry into mitochondria from TRMA cells
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has not been studied. Interestingly, ThDP-utilizing enzymes
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in mitochondria are much less affected (as revealed by loss
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of activity) upon progressive depletion of thiamine
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available to TRMA cells than are ThDP-utilizing enzymes of
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the cytosol [ 6 ] . For these reasons, we have examined the
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uptake of thiamine and especially ThDP by mitochondria from
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several human cell types, including cells from TRMA
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patients.
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Results
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Uptake of thiamine by cells and mitochondria
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Although our interests primarily were in mitochondrial
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uptake of thiamine and its derivatives, we first examined
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cellular uptake of thiamine by the lymphoblast cell lines
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and found thiamine uptake properties typical of other
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mammalian cells. Figure 1aindicates thiamine uptake by
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normal lymphoblasts and lymphoblasts derived from a TRMA
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patient. The high affinity transport of thiamine by
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normal lymphoblasts is abolished in the presence of a 100
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fold excess of unlabeled thiamine. Under such conditions,
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some uptake continues from a low affinity (K
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m in the mM range) transport mechanism
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[ 3 ] and/or from diffusion [ 20 ] that characterizes
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thiamine uptake in all mammalian cells examined to date.
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Using an expanded range of thiamine concentrations from
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that shown in fig. 1in multiple experiments resulted in a
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K
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m of 1.0 ± 0.9 μM for the high
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affinity transport by normal lymphoblasts. As expected,
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lymphoblasts derived from the TRMA patient showed no high
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affinity thiamine transport as revealed by thiamine
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uptake being the same in the absence and presence of
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excess unlabelled thiamine.
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Mitochondria isolated from normal lymphoblasts also
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were found to take up thiamine (fig. 1b) in a manner
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similar to that of cellular uptake, with both a high and
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low affinity component. Using an expanded range of
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thiamine concentrations in multiple experiments resulted
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in a K
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m of 2.1 ± 0.4 μM for high affinity
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thiamine uptake by normal lymphoblast mitochondria.
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Interestingly, mitochondria from TRMA lymphoblasts did
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not possess a "high affinity" thiamine transport capacity
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as did mitochondria form normal lymphoblasts. No
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difference in uptake of thiamine by TRMA mitochondria was
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found in the presence and absence of excess unlabelled
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thiamine (fig. 1b).
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This finding suggests that cellular and mitochondrial
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uptake of thiamine may be mediated by the same
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transporter since TRMA is defined by mutation within the
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thiamine transporter located on the plasma membrane [ 7 8
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9 10 11 12 ] . Using antiserum specific for the human
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thiamine transporter that is mutated in TRMA individuals,
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western analysis consistently resulted in a faint but
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detectable band within the isolated mitochondrial
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suspension (fig. 1c), even after extensive and multiple
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washing.
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Uptake of ThDP by mitochondria
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Although mitochondria from lymphoblasts (above) and
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other mammalian cells [ 13 ] were found to take up
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thiamine, the physiological significance of the uptake is
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unknown given that thiamine diphosphokinase is cytosolic
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and mitochondria cannot convert thiamine to ThDP [ 14 16
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21 ] . We thus were interested in uptake of ThDP by
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mitochondria, a possibility demonstrated previously with
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rat liver [ 14 ] . Mitochondria from normal human
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lymphoblasts were able to take up ThDP in a saturable,
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biphasic manner (fig. 2) with a first saturation in the
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submicromolar range (described below) and a second at
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much higher concentrations of ThDP. Time course
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experiments indicated ThDP uptake was linear for at least
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20 minutes (data not shown), and uptake was linear with
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the amount of mitochondrial protein added (inset of fig.
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2).
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Although the biphasic nature of the uptake is readily
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seen in various plots of the data, the existence of the
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high affinity component perhaps is best illustrated in
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fig. 3in which the uptake at submicromolar concentrations
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of ThDP is illustrated (open squares). Uptake of ThDP was
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repeated in the presence of 30 μM non-radioactive ThDP, a
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concentration that is 100 to about 40 fold excess over
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the concentration of radioactive ThDP that was used.
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Given the K
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m values for the high and low affinity
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components (see below), this excess should abolish most
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of the high affinity uptake but have little to no effect
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on the low affinity uptake. The uptake due solely to the
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low affinity component was calculated using the kinetic
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parameters determined for this component and was plotted
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as open triangles. As seen in fig. 3, uptake in the
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presence of 30 μM non-radioactive ThDP (open circles) was
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essentially identical to that calculated for the low
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affinity component and abolition of the high affinity
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uptake indeed was observed.
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Using the data from 4 independent experiments resulted
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in the determination of a K
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m of 0.38 μM for the high affinity
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(table 1) and 115 μM for the low affinity uptake
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components. The high affinity K
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m value compares favorably with the
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estimated 2 to 3 μM intracellular concentration of free
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ThDP.
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Mitochondria isolated from TRMA lymphoblasts took up
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ThDP in an essentially identical saturable, biphasic
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fashion as uptake by normal mitochondria (fig. 4). The
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inset compares the Lineweaver-Burk plot of the high
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affinity uptake component for mitochondria of both cell
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types. A high affinity K
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m of 0.60 (table 1) was calculated for
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mitochondrial uptake of ThDP for TRMA lymphoblasts, a
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value that is essentially the same as that for
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mitochondria isolated from normal lymphoblasts. The
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results indicate that although mitochondria from TRMA
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lymphoblasts cannot take up thiamine with high affinity,
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they can efficiently import ThDP, the active form of
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thiamine.
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Previous work has indicated that different cell types
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may differentially regulate intracellular pools of
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thiamine and/or its phosphorylated derivatives [ 6 ] .
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Thus, we examined ThDP uptake by several other cell
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types. As shown in table 1, high affinity uptake of ThDP
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by mitochondria from fibroblasts and neuroblastoma cells
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was essentially the same as that for normal and TRMA
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lymphoblasts as revealed by the similar K
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m values. The apparent affinity for
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ThDP characteristic of the high affinity uptake component
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was essentially identical for all cell types examined,
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however variation was seen in transport capacity, as
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revealed by substantially different values for V
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max (table 1). Mitochondria from all
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of the cell types examined also possessed the low
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affinity uptake characterized by K
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m 's similar to that of normal
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lymphoblasts but with a greater range of values being
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found (20 to 115 μM).
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The final entry in table 1is for ThDP uptake by
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mitochondria isolated from
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glyB cells.
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GlyB cells are a Chinese hamster
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ovary cell line that is deficient in the transport of
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folate into mitochondria. For reasons discussed below,
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ThDP uptake was examined in these cells. As seen in table
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1, high affinity uptake was found with kinetic constants
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similar to those of the human cell types. The low
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affinity uptake component was also similar to that by
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human mitochondria (data not shown).
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Discussion + Conclusion
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As has been reported for mitochondria of rat liver [ 13
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] , mitochondria from human lymphoblasts were found herein
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to take up thiamine in a saturable manner characterized by
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a K
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m of 2.1 μM. Upon entry into a cell,
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thiamine is rapidly diphosphorylated to ThDP, resulting in
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a low intracellular thiamine concentration [ 4 17 ] . The K
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m determined here is about an order of
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magnitude greater than the estimated intracellular thiamine
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concentration [ 4 ] , raising questions about the
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efficiency of such uptake.
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Surprisingly, mitochondria derived from TRMA
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lymphoblasts lacked the high affinity uptake of thiamine.
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TRMA is caused by mutations which destroy the high affinity
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thiamine transporter of the plasma membrane [ 7 8 9 10 11
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12 ] . The similar K
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m values found for cellular and
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mitochondrial uptake of thiamine for normal lymphoblasts
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and the lack of such uptake by TRMA mitochondria and TRMA
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cells suggests that high affinity thiamine import into
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mitochondria may be carried out by the same transporter or
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a variant form, perhaps generated by differential splicing,
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of that serving on the plasma membrane. Although western
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analysis using anti-human transporter (that is mutated in
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TRMA individuals) antiserum supports this interpretation,
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further experiments need to be carried out to substantiate
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the suggestion of a shared thiamine transporter between
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these two membrane systems. Even if true, the physiological
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significance of thiamine uptake by mitochondria is unknown
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since mitochondria cannot form ThDP from thiamine [ 14 15
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16 ] .
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We find that mitochondria from a variety of human cell
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types efficiently take up ThDP. Uptake is biphasic with a
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high and a low affinity component. The K
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m values characteristics of the high
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affinity uptake component (all around 0.4 μM) are
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comparable to the estimated intracellular concentration of
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free (non-enzyme bound) cytosolic ThDP of around 3 μM [ 4 ]
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. This suggests that the high affinity uptake system is the
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physiologically relevant mechanism responsible for ThDP
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entry into mitochondria. Earlier work with rat liver
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mitochondria identified a ThDP uptake system with an
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estimated K
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m of around 20 μM [ 14 ] . This is of
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the same order of magnitude that we find for the low
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affinity component in the human cells examined herein. The
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previous work used a less sensitive procedure of examining
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ThDP uptake and did not examine uptake below 10 μM. This
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would explain the lack of identification in the previous
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work of the high affinity uptake component.
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There is a high degree of amino acid similarity among
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folate transporters and the thiamine transporter of the
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plasma membrane [ 7 8 9 10 ] . Recently, it was found that
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in murine cells there can be a substantial efflux of ThDP
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mediated by the reduced folate carrier protein [ 22 ] .
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GlyB cells are a Chinese hamster
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ovary cell line derivative that are deficient in the
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transport of folates into mitochondria, and the responsible
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mitochondrial transporter has recently been identified and
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its gene cloned [ 23 ] . We wondered if the mitochondrial
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folate transporter was responsible for uptake of ThDP into
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mitochondria, making analogies to the ability of the plasma
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membrane folate transporter being able to transport ThDP.
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However, this is not the case as
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glyB cells that lack the
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mitochondrial folate transporter were found to take up ThDP
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with high affinity kinetics similar to that of mitochondria
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of human cells.
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Mitochondria from three human cell types - lymphoblasts,
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fibroblasts, and neruoblastoma cells - all possessed a high
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affinity ThDP uptake component characterized by equivalent
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apparent affinity for ThDP as revealed by essentially
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identical K
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m values. Previous studies indicate the
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existence of a complex, cell-type dependent regulation of
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compartmentalization and intracellular pools of thiamine
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and/or its phosphorylated derivatives in response to
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fluctuating extracellular thiamine levels [ 4 6 17 ] . The
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cell lines used here were also used in the studies leading
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to this conclusion. Clearly, differences in mitochondrial
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transporter affinities do not contribute to the cell-type
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dependent regulation of ThDP compartmentalization. However,
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we did find significant differences in ThDP uptake capacity
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with respect to cell type as revealed by variation in the V
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max values. Neuroblastoma mitochondria
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possessed the largest uptake capacity, having a V
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max 4 to 30 fold higher than that of the
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other cell types examined. Interestingly, of the three cell
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types neuroblastoma cells also are the most resistant to
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changes in mitochondrial ThDP-utilizing enzyme activity
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upon progressive depletion of the thiamine made available
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to the cells [ 6 ] . This suggests that cell-dependent
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variation in ThDP uptake capacity by mitochondria may
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contribute to the cell-dependent regulation of ThDP
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compartmentalization. As such regulation was most clearly
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revealed upon progressively depleting thiamine from cells [
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6 ] , it will be of interest to examine possible changes in
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mitochondrial transport capacity in response to thiamine
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depletion.
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Studies on the sensitivity of ThDP-utilizing enzymes to
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progressive depletion of thiamine that is available to the
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cell indicate that such enzymes in mitochondria are
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significantly less sensitive than cytosolic enzymes in TRMA
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cells [ 6 ] . This could be interpreted as efficient import
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of thiamine/ThDP into mitochondria in TRMA cells even
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though thiamine inefficiently enters these cells due to the
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lack of the high affinity thiamine transporter. Although we
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found a lack of mitochondrial uptake of thiamine in TRMA
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cells, our finding of an intact, high affinity ThDP
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transport mechanism for TRMA mitochondria is consistent
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with and offers an explanation for such an
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interpretation.
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Materials and Methods
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Radiochemicals
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[ 3H]thiamine (1 Ci/mmol, radiochemical purity greater
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than 97%) and [ 3H]thiamine diphosphate (1.4 Ci/mmol,
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radiochemical purity greater than 98 %) were purchased
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from Moravek Biochemical Inc (Brea, CA).
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Cell culture
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Normal lymphoblasts, TRMA lymphoblasts and fibroblasts
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cell lines were obtained and have been characterized as
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described [ 6 ] . The human neuroblastoma cells were an
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SY-SY5Y cell line, a thrice-cloned subline of SK-N-SH [
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24 ] .
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GlyB cells, a Chinese hamster ovary
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K1 subline, are deficient in the transport of folate into
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mitochondria [ 23 ] and were a kind gift from L. Chasin
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(Columbia University). All cell types were growth at 37°C
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in the presence of 10 μM thiamine in RPMI 1640 medium
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supplemented with 10% heat-inactive fetal calf serum, 2
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mM L-glutamine and 1 g/L penicillin/streptomycin, except
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glyB cells which were grown in MEM
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medium. Cells were grown and used at late log phase or at
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80-90% confluency.
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Cellular thiamine transport
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Cells were harvested, washed four times with 40 ml of
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ice-cold transport buffer (145 mM NaCl, 1 mM MgCl
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2 , 1 mM CaCl
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2 , 10 mM glucose, 10 mM HEPES, pH
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7.4), titered, and preincubated for 30 min. at 37°C after
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resuspending 3 × 10 7cells in 1 ml of transport buffer.
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Various amounts of [ 3H]thiamine (to give submicromolar
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and micromolar final concentrations) were added and the
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reactions were incubated for 30 min. The specific
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activity of the radioactive thiamine was the same for
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each concentration used. The cells were collected by
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rapid filtration onto glass fiber filters (type A/E,
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Gelman Sciences, Ann Arbor, MI) and washed via filtration
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with 10 ml of cold transport buffer. After thorough
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drying (overnight at 60°C), the amount of labeled
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thiamine taken up by the cells was determined by
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scintillation counting [ 25 ] . For each concentration,
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the uptake in the presence of a 100-fold excess of
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unlabelled thiamine was performed to assess the
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contribution to uptake from a low affinity (K
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m in the mM range) component [ 3 ]
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and/or from diffusion [ 20 ] .
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Isolation of mitochondria
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Mitochondria were isolated from about 3 × 10 8cells
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according to published procedures [ 26 27 ] . The final
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mitochondrial pellet was suspended in suspension buffer
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(140 mM KCl, 0.3 mM EDTA, 5 mM MgCl
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2 , 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4) to give a
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protein concentration of 3-4 mg/ml. Protein concentration
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was determined using the Bio-Rad DC Protein Assay Kit
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(Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA). The isolation and
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purity of the mitochondrial preparations were monitored
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by western analysis using anti-cytochrome C antiserum and
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by microscopy. Western analysis also was performed on the
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subcellular fractions using antiserum raised against a
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human thiamine transporter-specific peptide. The
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antiserum detects a protein of 55 KD (predicted size of
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the plasma membrane thiamine transporter) that is not
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detected in cells from TRMA individuals that possess a
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premature stop codon within the transporter gene
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(unpublished results).
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Uptake of thiamine and ThDP by mitochondria
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Uptake of thiamine and ThDP by mitochondria was
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determined by a rapid filtration procedure [ 26 28 ] .
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Incubations were performed at 37°C by rapidly mixing 30
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μl of mitochondrial suspension (ca. 100 micrograms of
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protein) with 220 μl of incubation buffer (140 mM KCl,
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0.3 mM EDTA, 5 mM MgCl
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2 , 10 mM Mes, pH 6.5) containing
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labeled thiamine or ThDP at various concentrations. The
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uptake was stopped at 15 min. by the addition of 2 ml of
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ice-cold stop buffer (100 mM KCl, 100 mM mannitol, 10 mM
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potassium phosphate, pH 7.4) and the mitochondria were
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collected by rapid filtration on 0.45 μM Millipore
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membrane filters. The filters were immediately washed
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with 5 ml of stop buffer via filtration, and they were
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subsequently dried at 60°C overnight. The amount of
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labeled thiamine or ThDP taken up by the mitochondria was
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determined by scintillation counting. Background binding
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was determined by using a 100 fold excess of unlabelled
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thiamine or ThDP in parallel reactions.
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Authors' Contributions
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QS carried out most of the experiments and participated
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in writing the manuscript. CKS conceived of the study,
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participated in its design and coordination, performed a
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few of the thiamine uptake by cells experiments, and
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participated in writing the manuscript.
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Abbreviations
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thiamine diphosphate (ThDP); thiamine-responsive
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megaloblastic anemia (TRMA)
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