TY - JOUR
T1 - Chemical probes for anion transporters of mammalian cell membranes
AU - Cabantchik, Z. I.
AU - Greger, R.
PY - 1992
Y1 - 1992
N2 - Mammalian cell membranes harbor several types of chloride channels, chloride-cation symporters/cotransporters, and several classes of anion exchangers/antiporters. These transport systems subserve different cellular or organismic functions, depending on the nature of the cell, the spatial organization of transporters, and their functional interplay. Chemical probing has played a central role in the structural and functional delineation of the various anion transport systems. The design of specific probes or their selection from existing sources coupled with their judicious application to the most appropriate biological system had led to the identification of specific anion transporters and to the elucidation of the underlying molecular transport mechanism. In many instances, chemical probing has remained the major or exclusive analytical tool for the functional definition or identification of a given transport system, particularly for discerning among the various anion transporters which operate in highly heterogeneous cell membrane systems. This work critically reviews the present state of the chemical armamentarium available for the most common anion transporters found in mammalian cell membranes. It encompasses the description of the most useful or commonly used probes in terms of their chemical, biochemical, physiological, and pharmacological properties. The review deals primarily with what chemical probes tell about anion transporters and, most importantly, with the limitations inherent in the use of probes in transport studies.
AB - Mammalian cell membranes harbor several types of chloride channels, chloride-cation symporters/cotransporters, and several classes of anion exchangers/antiporters. These transport systems subserve different cellular or organismic functions, depending on the nature of the cell, the spatial organization of transporters, and their functional interplay. Chemical probing has played a central role in the structural and functional delineation of the various anion transport systems. The design of specific probes or their selection from existing sources coupled with their judicious application to the most appropriate biological system had led to the identification of specific anion transporters and to the elucidation of the underlying molecular transport mechanism. In many instances, chemical probing has remained the major or exclusive analytical tool for the functional definition or identification of a given transport system, particularly for discerning among the various anion transporters which operate in highly heterogeneous cell membrane systems. This work critically reviews the present state of the chemical armamentarium available for the most common anion transporters found in mammalian cell membranes. It encompasses the description of the most useful or commonly used probes in terms of their chemical, biochemical, physiological, and pharmacological properties. The review deals primarily with what chemical probes tell about anion transporters and, most importantly, with the limitations inherent in the use of probes in transport studies.
KW - antiporters
KW - bicarbonate
KW - channels
KW - chloride
KW - cotransporters
KW - exchange rs
KW - inhibitors
KW - membrane proteins
KW - permeability
KW - structure-activity relationships
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0026572717&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1152/ajpcell.1992.262.4.c803
DO - 10.1152/ajpcell.1992.262.4.c803
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C2 - 1566811
AN - SCOPUS:0026572717
SN - 0002-9513
VL - 262
SP - C803-C827
JO - American Journal of Physiology - Cell Physiology
JF - American Journal of Physiology - Cell Physiology
IS - 4 31-4
ER -