首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Mechanisms of acid release and intracellular pH (pHi) homeostasis were analysed in goldfish (Carassius auratus) gill cells in primary culture. The rate of acid secretion was measured using a cytosensor microphysiometer, and pHi was determined using the fluorescent probe 2,7-bis-(3-carboxypropyl)-5-(and-6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCPCF). Amiloride, a Na+ channel and Na+/H+ exchanger (NHE) inhibitor, had no effect on pHi, but acid secretion of the gill cells was significantly impaired. In the presence of amiloride, the intracellular acidification (achieved using the NH4Cl pulse technique) was more severe than in the absence of amiloride, and recovery from the acidosis was slowed down. Accordingly, acid secretion of gill cells was severely reduced in the absence of extracellular Na+. Under steady-state conditions, 4,4-diisothiocyanatodihydro-stilbene-2,2-disulfonic acid (DIDS), a HCO3-transport inhibitor, caused a slow acidification of pHi, and acid secretion was significantly reduced. No recovery from intracellular acidification was observed in the presence of DIDS. Bafilomycin A1, an inhibitor of V-ATPase, had no effect on steady-state pHi and recovery from an intracellular acidification, whereas the rate of acid secretion under steady-state conditions was slightly reduced. Immunohistochemistry clearly revealed the presence of the V-ATPase B-subunit in goldfish gill lamellae. Taken together, these results suggest that a Na+-dependent HCO3 transport is the dominant mechanism besides an NHE and V-ATPase to control pHi in goldfish gill cells.Communicated by G. Heldmaier  相似文献   

2.
Summary In rabbit gallbladder epithelium, a Na+/H+, Cl/HCO 3 double exchange and a Na+–Cl symport are both present, but experiments on intact tissue cannot resolve whether the two transport systems operate simultaneously. Thus, isolated apical plasma membrane vesicles were prepared. After preloading with Na+, injection into a sodium-free medium caused a stable intravesicular acidification (monitored with the acridine orange fluorescence quenching method) that was reversed by Na+ addition to the external solution. Although to a lesser extent, acidification took place also in experiments with an electric potential difference (PD) equal to 0. If a preset pH difference (pH) was imposed ([H+]in>[H+]out, PD=0), the addition of Na-gluconate to the external solution caused pH dissipation at a rate that followed saturation kinetics. Amiloride (10–4 m) reduced the pH dissipation rate. Taken together, these data indicate the presence of Na+ and H+ conductances in addition to an amiloride-sensitive, electroneutral Na+/H+ exchange.An inwardly directed [Cl] gradient (PD=0) did not induce intravesicular acidification. Therefore, in this preparation, there was no evidence for the presence of a Cl/OH exchange.When both [Na+] and [Cl] gradients (outwardly directed, PD=0) were present, fluorescence quenching reached a maximum 20–30 sec after vesicle injection and then quickly decreased. The decrease was not observed in the presence of a [Na+] gradient alone or the same [Na+] gradient with Cl at equal concentrations at both sides. Similarly, the decrease was abolished in the presence of both Na+ and Cl concentration gradients and hydrochlorothiazide (5×10–4 m). The decrease was not influenced by an inhibitor of Cl/OH exchange (10–4 m furosemide) or of Na+–K+–2Cl symport (10–5 m bumetanide).We conclude that a Na+/H+ exchange and a Na+–Cl symport are present and act simultaneously. This suggests that in intact tissue the Na+–Cl symport is also likely to work in parallel with the Na+/H+ exchange and does not represent an induced homeostatic reaction of the epithelium when Na+/H+ exchange is inhibited.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Bidirectional transepithelial K+ flux measurements across high-resistance epithelial monolayers of MDCK cells grown upon millipore filters show no significant net K+ flux.Measurements of influx and efflux across the basal-lateral and apical cell membranes demonstrate that the apical membranes are effectively impermeable to K+.K+ influx across the basal-lateral cell membranes consists of an ouabain-sensitive component, an ouabain-insensitive component, an ouabain-insensitive but furosemide-sensitive component, and an ouabain-and furosemide-insensitive component.The action of furosemide upon K+ influx is independent of (Na+–K+)-pump inhibition. The furosemide-sensitive component is markedly dependent upon the medium K+, Na+ and Cl content. Acetate and nitrate are ineffective substitutes for Cl, whereas Br is partially effective. Partial Cl replacement by NO3 gives a roughly linear increase in the furosemide-sensitive component. Na+ replacement by choline abolishes the furosemide-sensitive component, whereas Li+ is a partially effective replacement. Partial Na+ replacement with choline gives an apparent affinity of 7mm Na, whereas variation of the external K+ content gives an affinity of the furosemide-sensitive component of 1.0mm.Furosemide inhibition is of high affinity (K 1/2=3 m). Piretanide, ethacrynic acid, and phloretin inhibit the same component of passive K+ influx as furosemide; amiloride, 4,-aminopyridine, and 2,4,6-triaminopyrimidine partially so. SITS was ineffective.Externally applied furosemide and Cl replacement by NO 3 inhibit K+ efflux across the basal-lateral membranes indicating that the furosemide-sensitive component consists primarily of KK exchange.  相似文献   

4.
Balnokin YV  Popova LG  Pagis LY  Andreev IM 《Planta》2004,219(2):332-337
Our previous investigations have established that Na+ translocation across the Tetraselmis viridis plasma membrane (PM) mediated by the primary ATP-driven Na+-pump, Na+-ATPase, is accompanied by H+ counter-transport [Y.V. Balnokin et al. (1999) FEBS Lett 462:402–406]. The hypothesis that the Na+-ATPase of T. viridis operates as an Na+/H+ exchanger is tested in the present work. The study of Na+ and H+ transport in PM vesicles isolated from T. viridis demonstrated that the membrane-permeant anion NO3 caused (i) an increase in ATP-driven Na+ uptake by the vesicles, (ii) an increase in (Na++ATP)-dependent vesicle lumen alkalization resulting from H+ efflux out of the vesicles and (iii) dissipation of electrical potential, , generated across the vesicle membrane by the Na+-ATPase. The (Na++ATP)-dependent lumen alkalization was not significantly affected by valinomycin, addition of which in the presence of K+ abolished at the vesicle membrane. The fact that the Na+-ATPase-mediated alkalization of the vesicle lumen is sustained in the absence of the transmembrane is consistent with a primary role of the Na+-ATPase in driving H+ outside the vesicles. The findings allowed us to conclude that the Na+-ATPase of T. viridis directly performs an exchange of Na+ for H+. Since the Na+-ATPase generates electric potential across the vesicle membrane, the transport stoichiometry is mNa+/nH+, where m>n.Abbreviations BTP Bis-Tris-Propane, 1,3-bis[tris(hydroxymethyl)methylamino]-propane - CCCP Carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - DTT Dithiothreitol - NCDC 2-Nitro-4-carboxyphenyl N,N-diphenylcarbamate - PMSF Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - PM Plasma membrane  相似文献   

5.
The effect of pH and transmembrane pH on the efficiency of the proton pump of the mitochondrialbc 1 complex bothin situ and in the reconstituted state was studied. In both cases the H+/e ratio for vectorial proton translocation by thebc 1 complex respiring at the steady state, under conditions in which the transmembrane pH difference (pH) represents the only component of the proton motive force (p), was significantly lower than that measured under level flow conditions. The latter amounts, at neutral pH, to 1 (2 including the scalar H+ release). In the reconstituted system steady-state pH was modulated by changing the intravesicular buffer as well as the intra/extra-liposomal pH. Under these conditions the H+/e ratio varied inversely with the pH. The data presented show that pH exerts a critical control on the proton pump of thebc 1 complex. Increasing the external pH above neutrality caused a decrease of the level flowH +/e ratio. This effect is explained in terms of proton/electron linkage inb cytochromes.  相似文献   

6.
Na+/H+ antiporters are universal devices involved in the Na+ and H+ circulation of both eukaroyotes and prokaryotes, thus playing an essential role in the pH and Na+ homeostasis of cells. This review focuses on the major impact of the application of molecular biology tools in the study of the antiporters. These tools permit the verification of the role of the antiporters and provide insights into their unique biology. A novel signal transduction to Na+ involvingnhaR, a positive regulator, controls the expression ofnhaA inE. coli. A pH sensor regulates the activity of Na+/H+ antiporters, both in eukaryotes and prokaryotes. A most intricate signal transduction to pH involving phosphorylation steps controls the activity ofnhel in higher mammals. The identification of Histidine 226 in the pH sensor of NhaA is a step forward towards the understanding of the pH regulation of these proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Summary To identify ion transport systems involved in the maintenance of vascular smooth muscle cell volume the effects of incubation medium osmolality and ion transport inhibitors on the volume and 86Rb and 22Na transport in cultured smooth muscle cells from rat aorta (VSMC) have been studied. A decrease of medium osmolality from 605 to 180 mosm increased intracellular water volume from 0.6 to 1.3 l per 106 cells. Under isosmotic conditions, cell volume was decreased by ouabain (by 10%, P< 0.005) but was not influenced by bumetanide, furosemide, EIPA and quinidine. These latter compounds were also ineffective in cell volume regulation under hypotonic buffer conditions. Under hyperosmotic conditions, cell volume was decreased by bumetanide (by 7%, P<0.05) and by ethylisopropyl amiloride (by 13%, P< 0.005). Ouabain-sensitive 86Rb influx was decreased by 30–40% under hypoosmotic conditions. An increase in medium osmolality from 275 to 410 mosm resulted in an eightfold increase in bumetanide-inhibited 86Rb influx and 86Rb efflux. The (ouabain and bumetanide)-insensitive component of 86Rb influx was not dependent on the osmolality of the incubation medium. However (ouabain and bumetanide)-insensitive 86Rb efflux was increased by 1.5–2 fold in VSMC incubated in hypotonic medium. Ethylisopropyl amiloride-inhibited 22Na influx was increased by sixfold following osmotic-shrinkage of VSMC. The data show that both Na+/H+ exchange and Na+/K+/2Cl cotransport may play a major role in the regulatory volume increase in VSMC. Basal and shrinkage-induced activities of Na+/K+/2Cl cotransport in VSMC were similarly sensitive to inhibition by either staurosporin, forskolin, R24571 or 2-nitro4-carboxyphenyl N,N-diphenylcarbomate (NCDC). In contrast basal and shrinkage-induced Na+/K+/2Cl cotransport were differentially inhibited by NaF (by 30 and 65%, respectively), suggesting an involvement of guanine nucleotide binding proteins in the volume-sensitive activity of this carrier. Neither staurosporin, forskolin, R24571 nor NCDC influenced shrinkage-induced Na+/H+ exchange activity. NaF increased Na+/H+ exchanger activity under both isosmotic and hyperosmotic conditions. These data demonstrate that different intracellular signalling mechanisms are involved in the volume-dependent activation of the Na+/K+/2Cl cotransporter and the Na+/H+ exchanger.The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Swiss National Foundation, grant No. 3.817.087. Bernadette Weber is thanked for preparing the figures.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The present studies were designed to test our previous suggestion that Na+/H+ exchange was activated by muscarinic stimulation of rat parotid acinar cells. Consistent with this hypothesis, we demonstrate here that intact rat parotid acini stimulated with the muscarinic agonist carbachol in HCO 3 -free medium show an enhanced recovery from an acute acid load as compared to similarly challenged untreated preparations. Amiloride-sensitive22Na uptake, due to Na+/H+ exchange, was also studied in plasma membrane vesicles prepared from rat parotid acini pretreated with carbachol. This uptake was stimulated twofold relative to that observed in vesicles from control (untreated) acini. This stimulation was time dependent, requiring 15 min of acinar incubation with carbachol to reach completion, and ws blocked by the presence of the muscarinic antagonist atropine (2×10–5 m) in the pretreatment medium. The effect of carbachol was dose dependent withK 0.53×10–6 m. Stimulation of the exchanger was also seen in vesicles prepared from acini pretreated with the -adrenergic agonist epinephrine, but not with the -adrenergic agonist isoproterenol, or with substance P. Kinetic analysis indicated that the stimulation induced by carbachol was due to an alkaline shift in the pH responsiveness of the exchanger in addition to an increasedapparent transport capacity. Taken together with previous results from this and other laboratories, these results strongly suggest that the Na+/H+ exchanger and its regulation are intimately involved in the fluidsecretory response of the rat parotid.  相似文献   

9.
Elementary Na+ currents were recorded at 19°C in inside-out patches from cultured neonatal rat cardiocytes. In analyzing the sensitivity of chemically modified Na+ channels to several class 1 antiarrhythmic drugs, the hypothesis was tested that removal of Na+ inactivation may be accompanied by a distinct responsiveness to these drugs, open channel blockade.Iodate-modified and trypsin-modified cardiac Na+ channels are noninactivating but strikingly differ from each other by their open state kinetics, a O1–O2 reaction (open(1) 1.4±0.3 msec; open(2) 5.4±1.1 msec; at –40 mV) in the former and a single open state (open 3.0±0.5 msec; at –40 mV) in the latter. Lidocaine (150 mol/liter) like propafenone (10 mol/liter), diprafenone (10 mol/liter) and quinidine (20 mol/liter) in cytoplasmic concentrations effective to depress NP o significantly can interact with both types of noninactivating Na+ channels to reduce the dwell time in the conducting configuration. lodate-modified Na+ channels became drug sensitive during the O2 state. At –40 mV, for example, lidocaine reduced open(2) to 62±5% of the control without detectable changes in open(1). No evidence could be obtained that these inhibitory molecules would flicker-block the open Na+ pore. Drug-induced shortening of the open state, thus, is indicative for a distinct mode of drug action, namely interference with the gating process. Lidocaine proved less effective to reduce open(2) when compared with the action of diprafenone. Both drugs apparently interacted with individual association rate constants, alidocaine was 0.64×106 mol–1 sec–1 and adiprafenone 13.6×106 mol–1 sec–1. Trypsin-modified Na+ channels also appear capable of discriminating among these antiarrhythmics, the ratio adiprafenone/alidocaine even exceeded the value in iodate-modified Na+ channels. Obviously, this antiarrhythmic drug interaction with chemically modified Na+ channels is receptor mediated: drug occupation of such a hypothetical hidden receptor that is not available in normal Na+ channels may facilitate the exit from the open state.This work was supported by a grant of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Ko 778/2-4), Bonn.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Ehrlich ascites tumor cells undergoing regulatory volume decrease (RVD) exhibit cytoplasmic acidification as measured by an intracellular fluorescent pH indicator. The acidification results in an activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger. The intracellular pH set point for the activation is estimated to be around 7.0. The activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger leads to an incomplete RVD. In support of this conclusion, amiloride and Na+-free medium, known to limit the Na+/H+ exchange, indeed enhance the RVD response. Intracellular acidification and activation of Na+/H+ exchange may be a general response of cells undergoing RVD.  相似文献   

11.
This review summarizes our experiments on the significance of the -subunit in the functional expression of Na+/K+-ATPase. The -subunit acts like a receptor for the -subunit in the biogenesis of Na+/K+-ATPase and facilitates the correct folding of the -subunit in the membrane. The -subunit synthesized in the absence of the -subunit is subjected to rapid degradation in the endoplasmic reticulum. Several assembly sites are assigned in the sequence of the -subunit from the cytoplasmic NH2-terminal domain to the extracellular COOH-terminus: the NH2-terminal region of the extracellular domain, the conservative proline in the third disulfide loop, the hydrophobic amino acid residues near the COOH-terminus and the cysteine residues forming the second and the third disulfide bridges. Upon assembly, the -subunit confers a resistance to trypsin on the -subunit. The conformations induced in the -subunit of Na+/K+-ATPase by Na+/K+- and H+/K+-ATPase -subunits are somehow different from each other and are named the NK-type and KH-type, respectively. The extracellular domain of the -subunit is involved in the folding of the -subunit leading to trypsin-resistant conformations. The sequences from Cys150 to the COOH-terminus of the Na+/K+-ATPase -subunit and from Ile89 to the COOH–terminus of the H+/K+-ATPase -subunit are necessary to form trypsin-resistant conformations of the NK- and HK-type. respectively. The first disulfide loop of the extracellular domain of the -subunits is critical in the expression of functional Na+/K+-ATPase.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The Ehrlich tumor cell possesses and anion-cation cotransport system which operates as a bidirectional exchanger during the physiological steady state. This cotransport system, like that associated with the volume regulatory mechanism (i.e. coupled net uptake of Cl+Na+ and/or K+) is Cl-selective and furosemide-sensitive, suggesting the same mechanism operating in two different modes. Since Na+ has an important function in the volume regulatory response, its role in steady-state cotransport was investigated. In the absence of Na+, ouabain-insensitive K+ and DIDS-insensitive Cl transport (KCl cotransport) are low and equivalent to that found in 150mm Na+ medium containing furosemide. Increasing the [Na+] results in parallel increases in K+ and Cl transport. The maximum rate of each (18 to 20 meq/(kg dry wt)·min) is reached at about 20mm Na+ and is maintained up to 55mm. Thus, over the range 1 to 55mm Na+ the stoichiometry of KCl cotransport is 11. In contrast to K+ and Cl, furosemide-sensitive Na+ transport is undetectable until the [Na+] exceeds 50mm. From 50 to 150mm Na+, it progressively rises to 7 meq/(kg dry wt)·min, while K+ and Cl transport decrease to 9 and 16 meq/(kg dry wt)·min, respectively. Thus, at 150mm Na+ the stoichiometric relationship between Cl, Na+ and K+ is 211. These results are consistent with the proposal that the Cl-dependent cation cotransport system when operating during the steady state mediates the exchange of KCl for KCl or NaCl for NaCl; the relative proportion of each determined by the extracellular [Na+].  相似文献   

13.
Summary In separated outer medullary collecting duct (MCD) cells, the time course of binding of the fluorescent stilbene anion exchange inhibitor, DBDS (4,4-dibenzamido-2,2-stilbene disulfonate), to the MCD cell analog of band 3, the red blood cell (rbc) anion exchange protein, can be measured by the stopped-flow method and the reaction time constant, DBDS, can be used to report on the conformational state of the band 3 analog. In order to validate the method we have now shown that the ID50,DBDS,MCD (0.5±0.1 m) for the H2-DIDS (4,4-diisothiocyano-2,2-dihydrostilbene disulfonate) inhibition of DBDS is in agreement with the ID50,Cl ,MCD (0.94±0.07 m) for H2-DIDS inhibition of MCD cell Cl flux, thus relating DBDS directly to anion exchange. The specific cardiac glycoside cation transport inhibitor, ouabain, not only modulates DBDS binding kinetics, but also increases the time constant for Cl exchange by a factor of two, from Cl=0.30±0.02 sec to 0.56±0.06 sec (30mm NaHCO3). The ID50,DBDS,MCD for the ouabain effect on DBDS binding kinetics is 0.003±0.001 m, so that binding is about an order of magnitude tighter than that for inhibition of rbc K+ flux (K I,K +,rbc=0.017 m). These experiments indicate that the Na+,K-ATPase, required to maintain cation gradients across the MCD cell membrane, is close enough to the band 3 analog that conformational information can be exchanged. Cytochalasin E (CE), which binds to the spectrin/actin complex in rbc and other cells, modulates DBDS binding kinetics with a physiological ID50,DBDS,MCD (0.076±0.005 m); 2 m CE also more than doubles the Cl exchange time constant from 0.20±0.04 sec to 0.50±0.08 sec (30mm NaHCO3). These experiments indicate that conformational information can also be exchanged between the MCD cell band 3 analog and the MCD cell cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of chemical modifiers of amino acid residues on the proton conductivity of H+-ATPase in inside out submitochondrial particles has been studied. Treatment of submitochondrial particles prepared in the presence of EDTA (ESMP) with the arginine modifiers, phenylglyoxal or butanedione, or the tyrosine modifier, tetranitromethane, caused inhibition of the ATPase activity. Phenylglyoxal and tetranitromethane also caused inhibition of the anaerobic release of respiratory H+ in ESMP as well as in particles deprived of F1 (USMP). Butanedione treatment caused, on the contrary, acceleration of anaerobic proton release in both particles. The inhibition of proton release caused by phenylglyoxal and tetranitromethane exhibited in USMP a sigmoidal titration curve. The same inhibitory pattern was observed with oligomycin and withN,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. In ESMP, relaxation of H+ exhibited two first-order phases, both an expression of the H+ conductivity of the ATPase complex. The rapid phase results from transient enhancement of H+ conduction caused by respiratory H+ itself. Oligomycin,N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, and tetranitromethane inhibited both phases of H+ release, and butanedione accelerated both. Phenylglyoxal inhibited principally the slow phase of H+ conduction. In USMP, H+ release followed simple first-order kinetics. Oligomycin depressed H+ release, enhanced respiratory H+, and restored the biphasicity of H+ release. Phenylglyoxal and tetranitromethane inhibited H+ release in USMP without modifying its first-order kinetics. Butanedione treatment caused biphasicity of H+ release from USMP, introducing a very rapid phase of H+ release. Addition of soluble F1 to USMP also restored biphasicity of H+ release. A mechanism of proton conduction by F o is discussed based on involvement of tyrosine or other hydroxyl residues, in series with the DCCD-reactive acid residue. There are apparently two functionally different species of arginine or other basic residues: those modified by phenylglyoxal, which facilitate H+ conduction, and those modified by butanedione, which retard H+ diffusion.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The fluorescence intensity of the dye 1,1-dipropyloxadicarbocyanine (DiOC3-(5)) has been measured in suspensions of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells in an attempt to monitor their membrane potential (V m ) under different ionic conditions, after treatment with cation ionophores and after hypotonic cell swelling. Calibration is performed with gramicidin in Na+-free K+/choline+ media, i.e., standard medium in which NaCl is replaced by KCl and cholineCl and where the sum of potassium and choline is kept constant at 155mm. Calibration by the valinomycin null point procedure described by Lariset al. (Laris, P.C., Pershadsingh, A., Johnstone, R.M., 1976,Biochim. Biophys. Acta 436:475–488) is shown to be valid only in the presence of the Cl-channel blocker indacrinone (MK196). Distribution of the lipophilic anion SCN as an indirect estimation of the membrane potential is found not to be applicable for the fast changes inV m reported in this paper. Incubation with DiOC3-(5) for 5 min is demenstrated to reduce the Cl permeability by 26±5% and the NO 3 permeability by 15±2%, while no significant effect of the probe could be demonstrated on the K+ permeability. Values forV m , corrected for the inhibitory effect of the dye on the anion conductance, are estimated at –61±1 mV in isotonic standard NaCl medium, –78±3 mV in isotonic Na+-free choline medium and –46±1 mV in isotonic NaNO3 medium. The cell membrane is depolarized by addition of the K+ channel inhibitor quinine and it is hyperpolarized when the cells are suspended in Na+-free choline medium, indicating thatV m is generated partly by potassium and partly by sodium diffusion. Ehrlich cells have previously been shown to be more permeable to nitrate than to chloride. Substituting NO 3 for all cellular and extracellular Cl leads to a depolarization of the membrane, demonstrating thatV m is also generated by the anions and that anions are above equilibrium. Taking the previously demonstrated single-file behavior of the K+ channels into consideration, the membrane conductances in Ehrlich cells are estimated at 10.4 S/cm2 for K+, 3.0 S/cm2 for Na+, 0.6 S/cm2 for Cl and 8.7 S/cm2 for NO 3 . Addition of the Ca2+-ionophore A23187 results in net loss of KCl and a hyperpolarization of the membrane, indicating that the K+ permeability exceeds the Cl permeability also after the addition of A23187. The K+ and Cl conductances in A23187-treated Ehrlich cells are estimated at 134 and 30 S/cm2, respectively. The membrane potential is depolarized in hypotonically swollen cells, confirming that the increase in the Cl permeability following hypotonic exposure exceeds the concommitant increase in the K+ permeability. In control experiments where the membrane potentialV m =E K =E Cl =E Na , it is demonstrated that cell volume changes has no significant effect on the fluorescence signal, apparently because of a large intracellular buffering capacity. The increase in the Cl conductances is 68-fold when cells are transferred to a medium with half the osmolarity of the standard medium, as estimated from the net Cl efflux and the change inV m . The concommitant increase in the K+ conductance, as estimated from the net K+ efflux, is only twofold.  相似文献   

16.
Addition of Na+ to the K+-loadedVibrio alginolyticus cells, creating a 250-fold Na+ gradient, is shown to induce a transient increase in the intracellular ATP concentration, which is abolished by the Na+/H+ antiporter, monensin. The pNa-supported ATP synthesis requires an additional driving force supplied by endogenous respiration or, alternatively, by a K+ gradient (high [K+] inside). In the former case, ATP formation is resistant to the protonophorous uncoupler. Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and diethylstilbestrol, but not vanadate, completely inhibit Na+ pulse-induced ATP formation. The data agree with the assumption that Na+-ATP-synthase is involved in oxidative phosphorylation inV. alginolyticus. Interrelation of H+ and Na+ cycles in bacteria is discussed.Abbreviations and electrochemical gradients of H+ and Na+, respectively - transmembrane electric potential difference - pH, pNa, and pK concentration gradients of H+, Na+, and K+, respectively - CCCP carbonyl cyanidem-chlorophenylhydrazone - DCCD N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - DES diesthylstilbestrol - HQNO 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinolineN-oxide - Tricine N[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl]glycine  相似文献   

17.
Summary The pH-stat technique has been used to measure H+ fluxes in gastric mucosa and urinary bladder in vitro while keeping mucosal pH constant. We now report application of this method in renal tubules. We perfused proximal tubules with double-barreled micropipettes, blocked luminal fluid columns with oil and used a double-barreled Sb/reference microelectrode to measure pH, and Sb or 1n HC1-filled microelectrodes to inject OH or H+ ions into the tubule lumen. By varying current injection, pH was kept constant at adjustable levels by an electronic clamping circuit. We could thus obtain ratios of current (nA) to pH change (apparent H+-ion conductance). These ratios were reduced after luminal 10–4 m acetazolamide, during injection of OH, but they increased during injection of H+. The point-like injection source causes pH to fall off with distance from the injecting electrode tip even in oil-blocked segments. Therefore, a method analogous to cable analysis was used to obtain H+ fluxes per cm2 epithelium. The relation betweenJ H + and pH gradient showed saturation kinetics of H fluxes, both during OH and H+ injection. This kinetic behavior is compatible with inhibition ofJ H by luminal H+. It is also compatible with dependence on Na+ and H+ gradients of a saturable Na/H exchanger. H+-ion back-flux into the tubule lumen also showed saturation kinetics. This suggests that H+ flow is mediated by a membrane component, most likely the Na+–H+ exchanger.  相似文献   

18.
Summary In the presence of inhibitors for mitochondrial H+-ATPase, (Na++K+)- and Ca2+-ATPases, and alkaline phosphatase, sealed brush-border membrane vesicles hydrolyse externally added ATP demonstrating the existence of ATPases at the outside of the membrane (ecto-ATPases). These ATPases accept several nucleotides, are stimulated by Ca2+ and Mg2+, and are inhibited by N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD), but not by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM). They occur in both brushborder and basolateral membranes. Opening of brush-border membrane vesicles with Triton X-100 exposes ATPases located at the inside (cytosolic side) of the membrane. These detergent-exposed ATPases prefer ATP, are activated by Mg2+ and Mn2+, but not by Ca2+, and are inhibited by DCCD as well as by NEM. They are present in brush-border, but not in basolateral membranes. As measured by an intravesicularly trapped pH indicator, ATP-loaded brush-border membrane vesicles extrude protons by a DCCD- and NEM-sensitive pump. ATP-driven H+ secretion is electrogenic and requires either exit of a permeant anion (Cl) or entry of a cation, e.g., Na+ via electrogenic Na+/d-glucose and Na+/l-phenylalanine uptake. In the presence of Na+, ATP-driven H+ efflux is stimulated by blocking the Na+/H+ exchanger with amiloride. These data prove the coexistence of Na+-coupled substrate transporters, Na+/H+ exchanger, and an ATP-driven H+ pump in brush-border membrane vesicles. Similar location and inhibitor sensitivity reveal the identity of ATP-driven H+ pumps with (a part of) the DCCD- and NEM-sensitive ATPases at the cytosolic side of the brush-border membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Elementary Na+ currents were recorded at 9°C in inside-out patches from cultured neonatal rat heart myocytes. In characterizing the sensitivity of cooled, slowly inactivating cardiac Na+ channels to several antiarrhythmic drugs including propafenone, lidocaine and quinidine, the study aimed to define the role of Na+ inactivation for open channel blockade.In concentrations (1–10 mol/liter) effective to depressNP o significantly, propafenone completely failed to influence the open state of slowly inactivating Na+ channels. With 1 mol/liter, open changed insignificantly to 96±7% of the control. Even a small number of ultralong openings of 6 msec or longer exceeding open of the whole ensemble several-fold and attaining open (at –45 mV) in cooled, (-)-DPI-modified, noninactivating Na+ channels proved to be drug resistant and could not be flicker-blocked by 10 mol/liter propafenone. The same drug concentration induced in(-)-DPI-modified Na+ channels a discrete block with association and dissociation rate constants of 16.1 ± 5.3 × 106 mol–1 sec–1 and 675 ± 25 sec–1, respectively. Quinidine, known to have a considerable affinity for activated Na+ channels, in lower concentrations (5 mol/liter) left open unchanged or reduced, in higher concentrations (10 mol/liter) open only slightly to 81% of the predrug value whereasNP o declined to 30%, but repetitive blocking events during the conducting state could never be observed. Basically the same drug resistance of the open state was seen in cardiac Na+ channels whose open-state kinetics had been modulated by the cytoplasmic presence of F ions. But in this case, propafenone reduced reopening and selectively abolished a long-lasting open state. This drug action is unlikely related to the inhibitory effect onNP o since hyperpolarization and the accompanying block attenuation did not restore the channel kinetics. It is concluded that cardiac Na+ channels cannot be flicker-blocked by antiarrhythmic drugs unless Na+ inactivation is removed.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The basic electrical properties of an isolated rat hepatocyte couplet (IRHC) system have been analyzed using classical techniques of epithelial electrophysiology, including measurement of electric potentials, resistances and intracellular ion activities. Applications of these techniques are discussed with respect to their limitations in small isolated cells. Mean intracellular and intracanalicular membrane potentials ranged from –23.7 to –46.7 and –4.3 to –5.9 mV, respectively. Membrane resistances were determined using an equivalent circuit analysis modified according to the geometry of the IRHC system. Resistances of the sinusoidal (basolateral) and canalicular (luminal) cell membranes and tight junctions averaged 0.15 and 0.78 G and 25m, respectively. The cells are electrically coupled via low resistance intercellular communications (58 M). Intracellular ion activities for Na+, K+ and Cl averaged 12.2, 88.1 and 17.7 mmol/liter, respectively. The basolateral membrane potential reveals a permeability sequence ofP K>P Cl>P Na. The luminal potential showed minimal dependence on changes in transjunctional ion gradients, indicating a poor ion selectivity of the paracellular pathway. The electrogenic (Na+–K)-ATPase contributes little to the luminal and cellular negative electric potential. Therefore, the luminal potential probably results from the secretion of impermeant ions and a Donnan distribution of permeant ions, a mechanism which provides the osmotic driving force for bile formation. By providing the unique opportunity to measure luminal potentials, this isolated hepatocyte system permits study of secretory mechanisms for the first time in a mammalian gland using electrophysiologic techniques.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号