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1.
Superoxide (O2-) increases Na+ reabsorption in the thick ascending limb (THAL) by enhancing Na/K/2Cl cotransport. However, the effects of O2- on other THAL transporters, such as Na(+)/H+ exchangers, are unknown. We hypothesized that O2- stimulates Na(+)/H+ exchange in the THAL. We assessed total Na(+)/H+ exchange activity by measuring recovery of intracellular pH (pH(i)) after acid loading in isolated perfused THALs before and after adding xanthine oxidase (XO) and hypoxanthine (HX). We found that XO and HX decreased total pH(i) recovery rate from 0.26 +/- 0.05 to 0.21 +/- 0.04 pH units/min (P < 0.05), and this net inhibition decreased steady-state pH(i) from 7.52 to 7.37. Because THALs have different Na(+)/H+ exchanger isoforms on the luminal and basolateral membrane, we tested the effects of xanthine oxidase and hypoxanthine on luminal and basolateral Na(+)/H+ exchange by adding dimethylamiloride to either the bath or lumen. Xanthine oxidase and hypoxanthine increased luminal Na(+)/H+ exchange from 3.5 +/- 0.8 to 6.7 +/- 1.4 pmol.min(-1).mm(-1) (P < 0.01) but decreased basolateral Na(+)/H+ exchange from 10.8 +/- 1.8 to 6.8 +/- 1.1 pmol.min(-1).mm(-1) (P < 0.007). To ascertain whether these effects were caused by O2- or H2O2, we examined the ability of tempol, a superoxide dismutase mimetic, to block these effects. In the presence of tempol, xanthine oxidase and hypoxanthine had no effect on luminal or basolateral Na(+)/H+ exchange. We conclude that O2- inhibits basolateral and stimulates luminal Na(+)/H+ exchangers, perhaps because different isoforms are expressed on each membrane. Inhibition of basolateral Na(+)/H+ exchange may enhance stimulation of luminal Na(+)/H+ exchange by providing additional protons to be extruded across the luminal membrane. Together, the effects of O2- on Na(+)/H+ exchange may increase net HCO3- reabsorption by the THAL.  相似文献   

2.
In bovine cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles, an outward H+ gradient stimulated the initial rate of amiloride-sensitive uptake of 22Na+, 42K+, or 86Rb+. Release of H+ from the vesicles was stimulated by extravesicular Na+, K+, Rb+, or Li+ but not by choline or N-methylglucamine. Uptakes of Na+ and Rb+ were half-saturated at 3 mM Na+ and 3 mM Rb+, but the maximal velocity of Na+ uptake was 1.5 times that of Rb+ uptake. Na+ uptake was inhibited by extravesicular K+, Rb+, or Li+, and Rb+ uptake was inhibited by extravesicular Na+ or Li+. Amiloride-sensitive uptake of Na+ or Rb+ increased with increase in extravesicular pH and decrease in intravesicular pH. In the absence of pH gradient, there were stimulations of Na+ uptake by intravesicular Na+ and K+ and of Rb+ uptake by intravesicular Rb+ and Na+. Similarly, there were trans stimulations of Na+ and Rb+ efflux by extravesicular alkali cations. The data suggest the existence of a nonselective antiporter catalyzing either alkali cation/H+ exchange or alkali cation/alkali cation exchange. Since increasing Na+ caused complete inhibition of Rb+/H+ exchange, but saturating K+ caused partial inhibitions of Na+/H+ exchange and Na+/Na+ exchange, the presence of a Na(+)-selective antiporter is also indicated. Although both antiporters may be involved in pH homeostasis, a role of the nonselective antiporter may be in the control of Na+/K+ exchange across the cardiac sarcolemma.  相似文献   

3.
Cardiac cells in culture (from rat and chick heart) have a membrane Na+/H+ exchange system that is inhibited by amiloride (K0.5 = 5 microM) and by its more potent N-5-disubstituted derivatives dimethylamiloride (K0.5 = 300 nM) and ethylisopropylamiloride (K0.5 = 30 nM). The properties of the cardiac Na+/H+ exchange system are similar to those found for the Na+/H+ exchanger in other cellular types. The Na+/H+ exchange system is a major pathway for Na+ uptake by cardiac cells. Ouabain which inhibits the (Na+,K+)-ATPase, a major pathway for Na+ efflux, is known to provoke Na+ accumulation and to stimulate 45Ca2+ entry via the Na+/Ca2+ exchange mechanism, thereby producing an inotropic effect. N-5-Disubstituted amiloride derivatives, by blocking Na+ entry into cardiac cells, antagonize both ouabain-induced intracellular Na+ accumulation and the ouabain-induced acceleration of 45Ca2+ uptake.  相似文献   

4.
In higher plants the xylem is the main pathway for anti-gravitational, long-distance transport of nutrients and water from the root through the shoot to the upper leaves. In the xylem conduit water is in a metastable state if tension larger than 0.1 MPa (i.e. negative pressure) is developed. While diurnal changes in negative pressure of individual xylem vessels can quite accurately be recorded by the minimal-invasive xylem pressure probe technique and water flow by non-invasive NMR techniques, the problem of continuous monitoring of solute flow remains a hitherto unresolved challenge. As shown here, integration of a K+ selective and a potential measuring microelectrode into the xylem pressure probe allowed on-line measurements of the K+ activity in individual xylem vessels of maize roots together with pressure and trans-root potential, the potential difference between the xylem and the external medium (i.e. the overall driving force of ions through the root tissue). When light irradiation was increased from 10 micro mol m(-2) s(-1) to 300 micro mol m(-2) s(-1) and negative pressure developed in the vessel, xylem K+ activity dropped from 3.6 +/- 2.6 mm to 0.9 +/- 0.7 mm (n = 16), whereas the trans-root potential depolarized from -2 +/- 11 mV to + 12 +/- 11 mV (n = 11), i.e. by + 14 +/- 7 mV. The effect of light on all three parameters was reversible. Exposure of the root to various K+ activities in the bath ranging from 0.1 to 43 mm revealed that the K+ activity of the xylem sap was shielded against short-term fluctuations in K+ supply to a large extent. In contrast, control experiments in which the root was cut 1 cm below the probe insertion point, allowing direct entry of external K+ into the xylem vessels, demonstrated that the xylem equilibrated rapidly with external K+. This was taken simultaneously as a proof for the correct reading of the probe.  相似文献   

5.
In this study we have identified the first plant K+/H+ exchanger, LeNHX2 from tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Moneymaker), which is a member of the intracellular NHX exchanger protein family. The LeNHX2 protein, belonging to a subfamily of plant NHX proteins closely related to the yeast NHX1 protein, is abundant in roots and stems and is induced in leaves by short term salt or abscisic acid treatment. LeNHX2 complements the salt- and hygromycin-sensitive phenotype caused by NHX1 gene disruption in yeast, but affects accumulation of K+ and not Na+ in intracellular compartments. The LeNHX2 protein co-localizes with Prevacuolar and Golgi markers in a linear sucrose gradient in both yeast and plants. A histidine-tagged version of this protein could be purified and was shown to catalyze K+/H+ exchange but only minor Na+/H+ exchange in vitro. These data indicate that proper functioning of the endomembrane system relies on the regulation of K+ and H+ homeostasis by K+/H+ exchangers.  相似文献   

6.
Rb(+) as a tracer for K(+) was used to test the hypothesis that uptake of K(+) from xylem vessels of small veins into the symplast of maize leaves occurs at the xylem/bundle sheath cell interface. 22.5 min after immersing cut leaves into 20 mM RbCl+1 mM KCl, Rb(+) appeared in the cells of the leaves. Sections of these leaves were freeze-dried. In cryo-thin sections (5 microm), (85)Rb(+) and (41)K(+) content was determined by laser microprobe mass analysis with a large resolution of about 1 microm. Determining the ratio of (85)Rb(+) to (41)K(+) in the cell walls and cytosols of bundle sheath cells, mesophyll cells, and in the cells between the xylem elements resulted in the following picture: In small veins, Rb(+) entered the symplast directly at the xylem/bundle sheath cell interface.  相似文献   

7.
Na+/H+ exchange activity in the plasma membrane of Arabidopsis   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
In plants, Na+/H+ exchangers in the plasma membrane are critical for growth in high levels of salt, removing toxic Na+ from the cytoplasm by transport out of the cell. The molecular identity of a plasma membrane Na+/H+ exchanger in Arabidopsis (SOS1) has recently been determined. In this study, immunological analysis provided evidence that SOS1 localizes to the plasma membrane of leaves and roots. To characterize the transport activity of this protein, purified plasma membrane vesicles were isolated from leaves of Arabidopsis. Na+/H+ exchange activity, monitored as the ability of Na to dissipate an established pH gradient, was absent in plants grown without salt. However, exchange activity was induced when plants were grown in 250 mm NaCl and increased with prolonged salt exposure up to 8 d. H+-coupled exchange was specific for Na, because chloride salts of other monovalent cations did not dissipate the pH gradient. Na+/H+ exchange activity was dependent on Na (substrate) concentration, and kinetic analysis indicated that the affinity (apparent Km) of the transporter for Na+ is 22.8 mm. Data from two experimental approaches supports electroneutral exchange (one Na+ exchanged for one proton): (a) no change in membrane potential was measured during the exchange reaction, and (b) Na+/H+ exchange was unaffected by the presence or absence of a membrane potential. Results from this research provide a framework for future studies into the regulation of the plant plasma membrane Na+/H+ exchanger and its relative contribution to the maintenance of cellular Na+ homeostasis during plant growth in salt.  相似文献   

8.
G Agam  A Argaman  A Livne 《FEBS letters》1989,244(1):231-236
Thrombin affects blood platelets by activation of Na+/H+ exchange and induction of aggregation, but the relationship between these effects is under debate. The present study attempts to clarify whether the activation of the exchanger activity is required for platelet aggregation. In apparent support of such a requirement, thrombin-induced aggregation is higher in Na+ medium than in N-methylglucamine+ medium and is inhibited by sphingosine, an inhibitor of protein kinase C known to regulate the Na+/H+ exchanger. However, the inhibition of aggregation by sphingosine occurs in both Na+-containing and Na+-free media, the aggregation is identical in Na+ and K+-containing media, and is not inhibited by 5-N-(3-aminophenyl)amiloride, at a concentration 10-fold higher than its Ki for platelet Na+/H+ exchange. Furthermore, at low concentration (0.005 U/ml) thrombin induces aggregation but does not activate the exchange. It is concluded that the activation of Na+/H+ exchange is not required for thrombin-induced platelet aggregation and that the apparent augmentation of aggregation by Na+ is due to an inhibitory effect of N-methylglucamine+.  相似文献   

9.
The fluorescence of internalized fluorescein isothiocyanate dextran has been used to monitor the intravesicular pH of submitochondrial particles (SMP). Respiring SMP maintain a steady-state delta pH (interior acid) that results from the inwardly directed H+ flux of respiration and an opposing passive H+ leak. Addition of K+, Na+, or Li+ to SMP results in a shift to a more alkaline interior pH (pHi) in both respiring and nonrespiring SMP. The K+-dependent change in pHi, like the K+/H+ antiport in intact mitochondria, is inhibited by quinine and by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. The Na+-dependent reaction is only partially inhibited by these reagents. Both the Na+- and the K+-dependent pH changes are sensitive to amiloride derivatives. The Km for both Na+ and K+ is near 20 mM whereas that for Li+ is closer to 10 mM. The K+/H+ exchange reaction is only slightly inhibited by added Mg2+, but abolished when A23187 is added with Mg2+. The passive exchange is optimal at pHi 6.5 with either Na+ or K+, and cannot be detected above pHi of 7.2. Both the Na+/H+ and the K+/H+ exchange reactions are optimal at an external pH of 7.8 in respiring SMP (pHi 7.1). Valinomycin stimulates the K+-dependent pH change in nonrespiring SMP, as does nigericin. It is concluded that SMP show K+/H+ antiport activity with properties distinct from those of Na+/H+ antiport. However, the properties of the K+/H+ exchange do not correspond in all respects to those of the antiport in intact mitochondria. Donnan equilibria and parallel uniport pathways for H+ and cations appear to contribute to cation-dependent pH changes in SMP.  相似文献   

10.
P Vigne  C Frelin    M Lazdunski 《The EMBO journal》1984,3(8):1865-1870
The internal pH (pHi) of chick muscle cells is determined by the transmembrane Na+ gradient. Li+, but not K+, Rb+ or Cs+, can substitute for Na+ for regulating the internal pH of chick muscle cells. Pharmacological evidence using amiloride and amiloride analogs has shown that the Na+/H+ exchange system is the membrane mechanism that couples the pHi to the transmembrane Na+ gradient. The pHi dependence of the amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchange mechanism was defined. Internal H+ interacts cooperatively with the Na+/H+ exchange system, in contrast with external H+, thus indicating an asymmetrical behaviour of this exchanger. The half-maximum effect for the activation by the internal H+ of the Na+ transporting activity of the amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchange was observed at pH 7.4. The Hill coefficient of the H+ concentration dependence is higher than 3. Insulin was shown to have no effect on the pHi of chick muscle cells.  相似文献   

11.
Gastric (H+ + K+)-ATPase was reconstituted into artificial phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol liposomes by means of a freeze-thaw-sonication technique. Upon addition of MgATP, active H+ transport was observed, with a maximal rate of 2.1 mumol X mg-1 X min-1, requiring the presence of 100 mM K+ at the intravesicular site. However, in the absence of ATP an H+-K+ exchange with a maximal rate of 0.12 mumol X mg-1 X min-1 was measured, which could be inhibited by the well-known ATPase inhibitors vanadate and omeprazole, giving the first evidence of a passive K+-H+ exchange function of gastric (H+ + K+)-ATPase. An Na+-H+ exchange activity was also measured, which was fully inhibited by 1 mM amiloride. Simultaneous reconstitution of Na+/H+ antiport and (H+ + K+)-ATPase could explain why reconstituted ATPase appeared less cation-specific than the native enzyme (Rabon, E.C., Gunther, R.B., Soumarmon, A., Bassilian, B., Lewin, M.J.M. and Sachs, G. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10200-10212).  相似文献   

12.
Early events in NaCl-induced root ion and water transport were investigated in maize (Zea mays L) roots using a range of microelectrode and imaging techniques. Addition of 100 mm NaCl to the bath resulted in an exponential drop in root xylem pressure, rapid depolarization of trans-root potential and a transient drop in xylem K(+) activity (A(K+) ) within ~1 min after stress onset. At this time, no detectable amounts of Na(+) were released into the xylem vessels. The observed drop in A(K+) was unexpected, given the fact that application of the physiologically relevant concentrations of Na(+) to isolated stele has caused rapid plasma membrane depolarization and a subsequent K(+) efflux from the stelar tissues. This controversy was explained by the difference in kinetics of NaCl-induced depolarization between cortical and stelar cells. As root cortical cells are first to be depolarized and lose K(+) to the environment, this is associated with some K(+) shift from the stelar symplast to the cortex, resulting in K(+) being transiently removed from the xylem. Once Na(+) is loaded into the xylem (between 1 and 5 min of root exposure to NaCl), stelar cells become more depolarized, and a gradual recovery in A(K+) occurs.  相似文献   

13.
Purified canine cardiac sarcolemmal membrane vesicles exhibit a sodium ion for proton exchange activity (Na+/H+ exchange). Na+/H+ exchange was demonstrated both by measuring rapid 22Na uptake into sarcolemmal vesicles in response to a transmembrane H+ gradient and by following H+ transport in response to a transmembrane Na+ gradient with use of the probe acridine orange. Maximal 22Na uptake into the sarcolemmal vesicles (with starting intravesicular pH = 6 and extravesicular pH = 8) was approximately 20 nmol/mg protein. The extravesicular Km of the Na+/H+ exchange activity for Na+ was determined to be between 2 and 4 mM (intravesicular pH = 5.9, extravesicular pH = 7.9), as assessed by measuring the concentration dependence of the 22Na uptake rate and the ability of extravesicular Na+ to collapse an imposed H+ gradient. All results suggested that Na+/H+ exchange was reversible and tightly coupled. The Na+/H+ exchange activity was assayed in membrane subfractions and found most concentrated in highly purified cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles and was absent from free and junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. 22Na uptake into sarcolemmal vesicles mediated by Na+/H+ exchange was dependent on extravesicular pH, having an optimum around pH 9 (initial internal pH = 6). Although the Na+/H+ exchange activity was not inhibited by tetrodotoxin or digitoxin, it was inhibited by quinidine, quinacrine, amiloride, and several amiloride derivatives. The relative potencies of the various inhibitors tested were found to be: quinacrine greater than quinidine = ethylisopropylamiloride greater than methylisopropylamiloride greater than dimethylamiloride greater than amiloride. The Na+/H+ exchange activity identified in purified cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles appears to be qualitatively similar to Na+/H+ exchange activities recently described in intact cell systems. Isolated cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles should prove a useful model system for the study of Na+/H+ exchange regulation in myocardial tissue.  相似文献   

14.
We studied the interactions of Na+, Li+, and amiloride on the Na+/H+ antiporter in brush-border membrane vesicles from rabbit renal cortex. Cation-mediated collapse of an outwardly directed proton gradient (pHin = 6.0; pHout = 7.5) was monitored with the fluorescent amine, acridine orange. Proton efflux resulting from external addition of Na+ or Li+ exhibited simple saturation kinetics with Hill coefficients of 1.0. However, kinetic parameters for Na+ and Li+ differed (Km for Li+ = 1.2 +/- 0.1 mM; Km for Na+ = 14.3 +/- 0.8 mM; Vmax for Li+ = 2.40 +/- 0.07 fluorescence units/s/mg of protein; Vmax for Na+ = 7.10 +/- 0.24 fluorescence units/s/mg of protein). Inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange by Li+ and amiloride was also studied. Li+ inhibited the Na+/H+ antiporter by two mechanisms. Na+ and Li+ competed with each other at the cation transport site. However, when [Na+] was markedly higher than [Li+], [( Na+] = 90 mM; [Li+] less than 1 mM), we observed noncompetitive inhibition (Vmax for Na+/H+ exchange reduced by 25%). The apparent Ki for this noncompetitive inhibition was congruent to 50 microM. In addition, 2-30 mM intravesicular Li+, but not Na+, resulted in trans inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange. Amiloride was a mixed inhibitor of Na+/H+ exchange (Ki = 30 microM, Ki' = 90 microM) but was only a simple competitive inhibitor of Li+/H+ exchange (Ki = 10 microM). At [Li] = 1 mM and [amiloride] less than 100 microM, inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange by a combination of the two inhibitors was always less than additive. These results suggest the presence of a cation-binding site (separate from the cation-transport site) which could be a modifier site of the Na+/H+ antiporter.  相似文献   

15.
Environmental Mg2+ was found to influence the K+/Na+ exchange rate of metabolizing yeast. Addition of EDTA increased the exchange rate and Mg2+ reversed the effect of EDTA. Yeast starved in the absence of Mg2+ exchanged cellular K+ or Na+ for external H+ when maintained at acidic pH. The exchange rate depended on cellular pH and showed the same kinetics for both K+ and Na+. At acidic pH, the presence of external cations neither inhibited H+ absorption nor changed the cation/H+ 1 : 1 stoichiometry. At neutral pH, external cations inhibited H+ influx but did not change the cation efflux. The K+/Na+ exchange is discussed as electrically coupled and the K+/H+ and Na+/H+ exchanges as electroneutral antiports.  相似文献   

16.
Uptake of 22Na+ by liver plasma membrane vesicles, reflecting Na+ transport by (Na+, K+)ATPase or Na+/H+ exchange was studied. Membrane vesicles were isolated from rat liver homogenates or from freshly prepared rat hepatocytes incubated in the presence of [Arg8]vasopressin or pervanadate and insulin. The ATP dependence of (Na+, K+)ATPase-mediated transport was determined from initial velocities of vanadate-sensitive uptake of 22Na+, the Na(+)-dependence of Na+/H+ exchange from initial velocities of amiloride-sensitive uptake. By studying vanadate-sensitive Na+ transport, high-affinity binding sites for ATP with an apparent Km(ATP) of 15 +/- 1 microM were observed at low concentrations of Na+ (1 mM) and K+ (1mM). At 90 mM Na+ and 60 mM K+ the apparent Km(ATP) was 103 +/- 25 microM. Vesiculation of membranes and loading of the vesicles prepared from liver homogenates in the presence of vasopressin increased the maximal velocities of vanadate-sensitive transport by 3.8-fold and 1.9-fold in the presence of low and high concentrations of Na+ and K+, respectively. The apparent Km(ATP) was shifted to 62 +/- 7 microM and 76 +/- 10 microM by vasopressin at low and high ion concentrations, respectively, indicating that the hormone reduced the influence of Na+ and K+ on ATP binding. In vesicles isolated from hepatocytes preincubated with 10 nM vasopression the hormone effect was conserved. Initial velocities of Na+ uptake (at high ion concentrations and 1 mM ATP) were increased 1.6-1.7-fold above control, after incubation of the cells with vasopressin or by affinity labelling of the cells with a photoreactive analogue of the hormone. The velocity of amiloride-sensitive Na+ transport was enhanced by incubating hepatocytes in the presence of 10 nM insulin (1.6-fold) or 0.3 mM pervanadate generated by mixing vanadate plus H2O2 (13-fold). The apparent Km(Na+) of Na+/H+ exchange was increased by pervanadate from 5.9 mM to 17.2 mM. Vesiculation and incubation of isolated membranes in the presence of pervanadate had no effect on the velocity of amiloride-sensitive Na+ transport. The results show that hormone receptor-mediated effects on (Na+, K+)ATPase and Na+/H+ exchange are conserved during the isolation of liver plasma membrane vesicles. Stable modifications of the transport systems or their membrane environment rather than ionic or metabolic responses requiring cell integrity appear to be involved in this regulation.  相似文献   

17.
Sea urchin sperm motility can be activated by alkalinization of the internal pH, and previous studies have shown that the internal pH can be regulated by a voltage-sensitive Na+/H+ exchanger present in the flagellar plasma membrane. In this study, the effects of speract, a peptide purified from egg conditioned media, on the Na+/H+ exchange were investigated. Evidence presented indicates that speract activates K+ channels in the flagellar membrane and modulates the Na+/H+ exchange activity through resultant changes in membrane potential. In the presence of tetraphenylphosphonium, a lipophilic ion, or high external Na+, the isolated flagella were depolarized, and Na+/H+ exchanger was inhibited. Speract and valinomycin, a K+ ionophore, were able to reactivate 22Na+ uptake, H+ efflux, and alkalinization of intraflagellar pH under either of the depolarizing conditions. Membrane potential measurements using 3,3'-dipropylthiodicarbocyanide iodide indicated repolarization by either speract or valinomycin. The speract-induced voltage changes did not require Na+ but were sensitive to [K+]. Thus, speract induced a slight depolarization in Na+-free seawater with 10 mM K+ but a hyperpolarization with 2 mM K+. Further support for the activation of K+ channels in the flagella was the 2-5-fold stimulation of K+ efflux induced by speract as measured with a K+ electrode. The ionic selectivity of the speract-activated channel assessed by voltage measurements was K+ greater than Rb+ greater than Cs+. The half-maximally effective concentration of speract was about 0.2 nM. That the H+ and K+ efflux in response to peptide was receptor-mediated was confirmed by the use of speract or resact on intact sea urchin spermatozoa, where the peptides were found to stimulate K+ efflux and to reverse the tetraphenylphosphonium inhibition on H+ efflux only in the homologous spermatozoa. Modulation of the voltage-sensitive Na+/H+ exchange by egg peptides, therefore, appears to be indirect and is coupled through its action on membrane potential.  相似文献   

18.
Regulation of Na+/H+ exchange by fetal bovine serum was studied in Caco-2 cells, an established cell line derived from a human colon carcinoma. Cells were grown as polarized monolayers on collagen-coated filters and intracellular pH measured fluorometrically with 2',7'-bis(2-carboxymethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein. Na+/H+ exchange was reduced 64% when cells were deprived of serum for 4 h. In contrast to other cell types, readdition of serum for 10 min did not activate Na+/H+ exchange; however, readdition of serum for 4 h restored Na+/H+ exchange to control values. This long-term effect of serum on Na+/H+ exchange activity could not be explained by changes in intracellular buffering capacity or intracellular [Na+]. 4-h serum deprivation reduced the K(t) of the exchanger for external Na+ from 21 to 6 mM, and reduced the V(max) by 57%, but did not alter the IC50 for amiloride in the presence of 140 mM Na+. Inhibition of protein synthesis with cycloheximide (5 microM) did not alter the effect of serum removal or readdition on Na+/H+ exchange. Low temperature (13 degrees C) completely prevented the inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange caused by the removal of serum. In addition, once Na+/H+ exchange was inhibited by serum removal at 37 degrees C, maintaining cells at 13 degrees C also blocked the recovery of Na+/H+ exchange caused by serum readdition. Conversely, cytochalasin D (0.1-20 microM) blocked the reduction of Na+/H+ exchange which occurred due to 4-h serum deprivation, but did not block the restoration of Na+/H+ exchange when the cells were re-exposed to serum for a further 4 h. Colchicine (20 microM) did not alter the effect of serum removal or readdition. These data suggest that serum regulates Na+/H+ exchange activity by a posttranslational mechanism which is dependent on F-actin.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of a transmembrane pH gradient on the ouabain, bumetanide, and phloretin resistant H+ efflux was studied in rabbit erythrocytes. Proton equilibration was reduced by the use of DIDS (125 microM) and acetazolamide (1 mM). H+ efflux from acid loaded erythrocytes (pHi = 6.1) was measured in a K+ (145 mM) medium, pH0 = 8.0, in the presence and absence of 60 microM 5,N,N-dimethyl-amiloride (DMA). The H+ efflux rate in a K+-containing medium was 116.38 +/- 4.5 mmol/l cell X hr. Substitution of Nao+ for Ko+ strongly stimulated H+ efflux to 177.89 +/- 7.9 mmol/l cell X hr. The transtimulation of H+ efflux by Nao+ was completely abolished by DMA falling to values not different from controls with an ID50 of about 8.6 X 10(-7) M. The sequence of substrate selectivities for the external transport site were Na greater than greater than greater than Li greater than choline, Cs, K, and Glucamine. The transport system has no specific anion requirement, but is inhibited by NO3-. The DMA sensitive H+ efflux was a saturable function of [Na+]o, with an apparent Km and Vmax of about 14.75 +/- 1.99 mM and 85.37 +/- 7.68 mmol/l cell X hr, respectively. However, the Nao+-dependent and DMA-sensitive H+ efflux was sigmoidally activated by [H+]i, suggesting that Hi+ interacts at both transport and modifier sites. An outwardly directed H+ gradient (pHi 6.1, pH = 8.0) also promoted DMA sensitive Na+ entry (61.2 +/- 3.0 mmol/l cell X hr) which was abolished when pHo was reduced to 6.0. The data is therefore consistent with the presence of a Na+/H+ exchange system in rabbit erythrocytes.  相似文献   

20.
Na+ and K+ transport in excised soybean roots   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Uptake, accumulation and xylem transport of K+ and Na+ in excised roots of soybean were investigated by use of a perfusion technique. This technique permitted independent quantification of, on the one hand, entry of ions into the roots and their transport through the cortex to the xylem vessels, and on the other hand reabsorption from the xylem vessels to the neighbouring cells and the external medium. Data are consistent with a low degree of selective uptake of K+ over Na+. However, Na+ depletion of the xylem stream by reabsorption limits, although weakly, its translocation to the shoots. Na+ reabsorbed is for a great part reexcreted into the external medium. The low efficiency of these processes is discussed in relation to the Na+ sensitivity of soybean.  相似文献   

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