1. Academic Validation
  2. Asymmetric dimethylarginine is transported by the mitochondrial carrier SLC25A2

Asymmetric dimethylarginine is transported by the mitochondrial carrier SLC25A2

  • Amino Acids. 2016 Feb;48(2):427-36. doi: 10.1007/s00726-015-2096-9.
Vito Porcelli 1 Antonella Longo 1 Luigi Palmieri 1 Ellen I Closs 2 Ferdinando Palmieri 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Laboratory of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Department of Biosciences, Biotechnologies and Biopharmaceutics, University of Bari, Via Orabona 4, 70125, Bari, Italy.
  • 2 Department of Pharmacology, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University, Obere Zahlbacher Strasse 67, 55101, Mainz, Germany.
  • 3 Laboratory of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Department of Biosciences, Biotechnologies and Biopharmaceutics, University of Bari, Via Orabona 4, 70125, Bari, Italy. [email protected].
Abstract

Asymmetric dimethyl L-arginine (ADMA) is generated within cells and in mitochondria when proteins with dimethylated arginine residues are degraded. The aim of this study was to identify the carrier protein(s) that transport ADMA across the inner mitochondrial membrane. It was found that the recombinant, purified mitochondrial solute carrier SLC25A2 when reconstituted into liposomes efficiently transports ADMA in addition to its known substrates arginine, lysine, and ornithine and in contrast to the other known mitochondrial amino acid transporters SLC25A12, SLC25A13, SLC25A15, SLC25A18, SLC25A22, and SLC25A29. The widely expressed SLC25A2 transported ADMA across the liposomal membrane in both directions by both unidirectional transport and exchange against arginine or lysine. The SLC25A2-mediated ADMA transport followed first-order kinetics, was nearly as fast as the transport of the best SLC25A2 substrates known so far, and was highly specific as symmetric dimethylarginine (SDMA) was not transported at all. Furthermore, ADMA inhibited SLC25A2 activity with an inhibition constant of 0.38 ± 0.04 mM, whereas SDMA inhibited it poorly. We propose that a major function of SLC25A2 is to export ADMA from mitochondria missing the mitochondrial ADMA-metabolizing Enzyme AGXT2. There is evidence that ADMA can also be imported into mitochondria, e.g., in kidney proximal tubulus cells, to be metabolized by AGXT2. SLC25A2 may also mediate this transport function.

Keywords

ADMA; Membrane transport; Mitochondria; Mitochondrial carrier; Mitochondrial transporter; SLC25A2.

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