Water transport across yeast vacuolar and plasma membrane-targeted secretory vesicles occurs by passive diffusion

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Abstract

To determine whether solute transport across yeast membranes was facilitated, we measured the water and solute permeations of vacuole-derived and late secretory vesicles in Saccharomyces cerevisiae; all permeations were consistent with passive diffusive flow. We also overexpressed Fps1p, the putative glycerol facilitator in S. cerevisiae, in secretory vesicles but observed no effect on water, glycerol, formamide, or urea permeations. However, spheroplasts prepared from the strain overexpressing Fps1p showed enhanced glycerol uptake, suggesting that Fps1p becomes active only upon insertion in the plasma membrane.

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Coury, L. A., Hiller, M., Mathai, J. C., Jones, E. W., Zeidel, M. L., & Brodsky, J. L. (1999). Water transport across yeast vacuolar and plasma membrane-targeted secretory vesicles occurs by passive diffusion. Journal of Bacteriology, 181(14), 4437–4440. https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.181.14.4437-4440.1999

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