Taurine, a sulfated beta-amino acid, is conditionally essential during development. A maternal supply of taurine is necessary for normal fetal growth and neurologic development, suggesting the importance of efficient placental transfer. Uptake by the brush-border membrane (BBM) in several other tissues has been shown to be via a selective Na+-dependent carrier mechanism which also has a specific anion requirement. Using BBM vesicles purified from the human placenta, we have confirmed the presence of Na+-dependent, carrier-mediated taurine transport with an apparent K(m) of 4.00 +/- 0.22-mu-M and a V(max) of 11.72-0.36 pmol mg-1 protein 20 s-1. Anion dependence was examined under voltage-clamped conditions, in order to minimize the contribution of membrane potential to transport. Uptake was significantly reduced when anions such as thiocyanate, gluconate, or nitrate were substituted for Cl-. In addition, a Cl--gradient alone (under Na+-equilibrated conditions) could energize uphill transport as evidenced by accelerated uptake (3.13 +/- 0.8 pmol mg-1 protein 20 s-1) and an overshoot compared to Na+, Cl-equilibrated conditions (0.60 +/-0.06 pmol mg-1 protein 20 s-1). A Cl--gradient (Na+-equilibrated) also stimulated uptake of [H-3]taurine against its concentration gradient. Analysis of uptake in the presence of varying concentrations of external Cl- suggested that 1 Cl- ion is involved in Na+/taurine cotransport. We conclude that Na+-dependent taurine uptake in the placental BBM has a selective anion requirement for optimum transport. This process is electrogenic and involves a stoichiometry of 2:1:1 for Na+/Cl-/taurine symport.