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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 1998 Jul;54(7):744–750. doi: 10.1007/s000180050202

Long-chain fatty acid uptake by skeletal myocytes: a confocal laser scanning microscopy study

C Elsing 1, J Górski 2, C Boeker 1, W Stremmel 1
PMCID: PMC11147328  PMID: 9711241

Abstract.

Studies of regulation of free fatty acid (FFA) utilization by skeletal muscles have focused on plasma FFA delivery and on intracellular factors affecting FFA metabolism. The present study was conducted to directly analyse the uptake process of fatty acids into single myocytes. Cells were isolated from the rat flexor digitorum brevis muscle. Confocal laser scanning microscopy was utilized to analyse the uptake of the fluorescent fatty acid derivative 12-NBD-stearate, which is not metabolized by muscle tissue. Uptake represented a saturable function of the unbound fatty acid concentration in the medium (K m 366 ± 118 nM, V max 2.1 ± 0.3 AU/s) and depended on the medium sodium concentration. Reduced buffer pH increased initial uptake rates, whereas lactate (10 mM) had no effect. Membrane hyper- and depolarization decreased uptake rates. This study demonstrates for the first time kinetic data from isolated myocytes with evidence for a carrier-mediated transport mechanism for long-chain fatty acids.

Keywords: Key words. Isolated myocytes; free fatty acid uptake; 12-NBD-stearate; confocal laser scanning microscopy.

Footnotes

Received 31 March 1998; accepted 8 May 1998


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

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