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First published online on September 27, 2002.
Copyright © 2002 by The Physiological Society
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2002.026377v1
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Received June 14, 2002
Accepted after revision August 28, 2002

Human, rat and chicken small intestinal Na+-Cl--creatine transporter: functional, molecular characterization and localization

M.J. Peral-Rubio1, M. García-Delgado1, M.L. Calonge1, J.M. Durán1, M.C. De La Horra1, T. Wallimann2, O. Speer2, and A. A. Ilundáin3*

1 Depto. Fisiología y Biología Animal, Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de Sevilla, 41012 Sevilla, Spain
2 Institute of Cell Biology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH-Hönggerberg, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland
3 Dept. Fisiología y Biología Animal, Facultad de Farmacia, C) Tramontana s/n, 41012 Sevilla, Spain

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ilundain{at}us.es.

In spite of all the fascinating properties of oral creatine supplementation, the mechanism(s) mediating its intestinal absorption has(have) not been investigated. The purpose of this study was to characterize intestinal creatine transport. [14C]Creatine uptake was measured in chicken enterocytes and rat ileum, and expression of the creatine transporter CRT was examined in human, rat and chicken small intestine by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, Northern blot, in situ hybridization, immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry. Results show that enterocytes accumulate creatine against its concentration gradient. This accumulation was electrogenic, Na+- and Cl--dependent, with a probable stoichiometry of 2 Na+: 1 Cl-: 1 creatine, and inhibited by ouabain and iodoacetic acid. The kinetic study revealed a Km for creatine of 29 µM. [14C]Creatine uptake was efficiently antagonized by non-labelled creatine, guanidinopropionic acid and cyclocreatine. More distant structural analogues of creatine, such as GABA, choline, glycine, ß-alanine, taurine and betaine, had no effect on intestinal creatine uptake, indicating a high substrate specificity of the creatine transporter. Consistent with these functional data, messenger RNA for CRT was detected only in the cells lining the intestinal villus. The sequences of partial clones, and of the full-length cDNA clone, isolated from human and rat small intestine were identical to previously cloned CRT cDNAs. Immunological analysis revealed that CRT protein was mainly associated with the apical membrane of the enterocytes. This study reports for the first time that mammalian and avian enterocytes express CRT along the villus, where it mediates high-affinity, Na+- and Cl--dependent, apical creatine uptake.




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