Agmatine and putrescine uptake in the human glioma cell line SK-MG-1

Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 2001 Jun;363(6):671-9. doi: 10.1007/s002100100418.

Abstract

The pharmacological properties of a specific agmatine uptake mechanism were investigated in the human glioma cell line SK-MG-1 and compared with those of the putrescine transporter expressed by the same cells and with those of several other organic cation transport systems or ion channels reported in the literature. The specific accumulation of [14C]agmatine at 37 degrees C above nonspecific accumulation at 4 degrees C was energy-dependent and saturable with a Vmax of 64.3+/-3.5 nmol/min per mg protein and a Km of 8.6+/-1.4 microM. Specific accumulation was attenuated by replacement of extracellular Na+ by choline by 65%, not affected by lithium and enhanced by replacement by sucrose. Phentolamine, clonidine, 1,3-di(2-tolyl)guanidine, histamine, putrescine, spermine and spermidine were inhibitors of specific [14C]agmatine accumulation. In contrast, corticosterone, desipramine, O-methylisoprenaline, cirazoline, moxonidine, L-arginine, L-lysine, verapamil, nifedipine and CdCl2 at concentrations up to 10 mM failed to inhibit specific [14C]agmatine accumulation, thus excluding that the latter is mediated by amino acid or monoamine carriers, by Ca2+ channels or by the organic cation transporters OCT1, OCT2, OCT3, OCTN1 or OCTN2. The pattern of activity of inhibitory compounds was also different from that determined for specific putrescine accumulation found in the same cells (Km 1.3+/-0.1 microM, Vmax 26.1+/-0.4 nmol/min per mg protein) ruling out an identity of the specific [14C]agmatine and [14C]putrescine accumulation mechanisms. It is concluded that specific accumulation of agmatine in human glioma cells is mediated by a specific transporter whose pharmacological properties are not identical to those of the agmatine transporter previously identified in rat brain synaptosomes and to other so far known carrier mechanisms for organic cations and ion channels. The agmatine uptake system may be important for the regulation of the extracellular concentration of agmatine in man.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Agmatine / metabolism*
  • Glioma / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Putrescine / metabolism*
  • Tumor Cells, Cultured / metabolism*

Substances

  • Agmatine
  • Putrescine