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antiport
(redirected from Antiporter)

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antiport /an·ti·port/ (an´tĭ-port) a mechanism of coupling the transport of two compounds across a membrane in opposite directions.
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Antiport: sodium-calcium exchanger. The electrochemical gradient of Na+ is used to pump Ca2+ out of the cell and thereby regulate the cytosolic Ca2+ level.

an·ti·port (nt-pôrt)
n.
A mechanism for the coupled transport of two different molecules or ions through a membrane in opposite directions.

antiport [an´tĭ-port]
a cell membranetransport mechanism that transports two molecules at once through the membrane in opposite directions. See also countertransport and symport.
 Antiport: sodium-calcium exchanger. The electrochemical gradient of Na+ is used to pump Ca2+ out of the cell and thereby regulate the cytosolic Ca2+ level.

antiport
a cell membrane structure that transports two molecules at once through the membrane in opposite directions.


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Glutamate acts as neurotransmitter via three classes of membrane proteins: ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptors, and the cystine/glutamate antiporter.
 
 
 
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