Vol. 282, Issue 3, G573-G579, March 2002
SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS
Identification of an apical
Cl
/HCO3
exchanger in the small
intestine
Zhaohui
Wang1,
Snezana
Petrovic1,2,
Elizabeth
Mann1,2, and
Manoocher
Soleimani1,2
1 Department of Medicine, University of Cincinnati,
Cincinnati 45267 - 0585; and 2 Veterans Affairs
Medical Center at Cincinnati, Ohio 45220
HCO
secretion is the most important defense mechanism against acid
injury in the duodenum. However, the identity of the transporter(s)
mediating apical HCO
secretion in the duodenum
remains unknown. A family of anion exchangers, which include
downregulated in adenoma (DRA or SLC26A3), pendrin (PDS or SLC26A4),
and the putative anion transporter (PAT1 or SLC26A6) has recently been
identified. DRA and pendrin mediate Cl
/base exchange;
however, the functional identity and distribution of PAT1 (SLC26A6) is
not known. In these studies, we investigated the functional identity,
tissue distribution, and membrane localization of PAT1. Expression
studies in Xenopus oocytes demonstrated that PAT1 functions
in Cl
/HCO
exchange mode. Tissue
distribution studies indicated that the expression of PAT1 is highly
abundant in the small intestine but is low in the colon, a pattern
opposite that of DRA. PAT1 was also abundantly detected in stomach and heart. Immunoblot analysis studies identified PAT1 as a ~90 kDa protein in the duodenum. Immunohistochemical studies localized PAT1 to
the brush border membranes of the villus cells of the duodenum. We
propose that PAT1 is an apical Cl
/HCO
exchanger in the small intestine.
duodenum; bicarbonate secretion; apical
Cl
/HCO
exchange; putative anion
transporter; downregulated in adenoma; chloride/formate exchanger