Transport of thyroid hormone across the cell membrane is required for
thyroid hormone action and metabolism. We have investigated the possible
transport of iodothyronines by the human system L amino acid transporter,
a protein consisting of the human 4F2 heavy chain and the human LAT1 light
chain. Xenopus oocytes were injected with the cRNAs coding for human 4F2
heavy chain and/or human LAT1 light chain, and after 2 d were incubated at
25 C with 0.01-10 microM [(125)I]T(4), [(125)I]T(3), [(125)I]rT(3), or
[(125)I]3,3'-diiodothyronine or with 10-100 microM [(3)H]arginine,
[(3)H]leucine, [(3)H]phenylalanine, [(3)H]tyrosine, or [(3)H]tryptophan.
Injection of human 4F2 heavy chain cRNA alone stimulated the uptake of
leucine and arginine due to dimerization of human 4F2 heavy chain with an
endogenous Xenopus light chain, but did not affect the uptake of other
ligands. Injection of human LAT1 light chain cRNA alone did not stimulate
the uptake of any ligand. Coinjection of cRNAs for human 4F2 heavy chain
and human LAT1 light chain stimulated the uptake of phenylalanine >
tyrosine > leucine > tryptophan (100 microM) and of 3,3'-diiodothyronine >
rT(3) approximately T(3) > T(4) (10 nM), which in all cases was Na(+)
independent. Saturation analysis provided apparent Michaelis constant
(K(m)) values of 7.9 microM for T(4), 0.8 microM for T(3), 12.5 microM for
rT(3), 7.9 microM for 3,3'-diiodothyronine, 46 microM for leucine, and 19
microM for tryptophan. Uptake of leucine, tyrosine, and tryptophan (10
microM) was inhibited by the different iodothyronines (10 microM), in
particular T(3). Vice versa, uptake of 0.1 microM T(3) was almost
completely blocked by coincubation with 100 microM leucine, tryptophan,
tyrosine, or phenylalanine. Our results demonstrate stereospecific
Na(+)-independent transport of iodothyronines by the human heterodimeric
system L amino acid transporter