SysBio Posted December 22, 2008 Posted December 22, 2008 Hello, I have been looking through publications inorder to find the maximum rates of a few transporters... this is easy when data is shown as V vs. S you can just find Vmax from where the graph is leveling off however, some data for transporters is shown as DISTRIBUTION RATIO vs TIME (where distribution ratio = inside cell / outside cell) does anyone know: 1) why would someone display the data like this?...(ie. is it for transporters with very fast kinetics)? 2) how can you find Vmax for a transporter with this data?
Mokele Posted December 22, 2008 Posted December 22, 2008 My guess is that it's for cells that are "leaky", like neurons are with potassium. They transport it one way, but it leaks back out/in. As for determining Vmax, you could probably calculate it from the relative concentrations - once it levels off, you can calculate the rate stuff would leave a permeable membrane at that concentration, and the transporters must be equal to that if the concentration gradient is constant over time. However, take this with a grain of salt - I'm a morphologist, not a molecular biologist. Mokele
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