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1.
22Na+ flux and cytoplasmic pH (pHi) determinations were used to study the reversibility, symmetry, and mechanism of activation of the Na+/H+ exchange system in rat thymic lymphocytes. In acid-loaded cells, the antiport can be detected as an Na+-induced, amiloride-sensitive alkalinization. At pHi greater than or equal to 7.0, amiloride- sensitive net H+ fluxes are not detectable. To investigate whether at this pHi the transporter is operative in a different mode, e.g., Na+/Na+ exchange, 22Na+ uptake was measured as a function of pHi. The results indicate that the antiport is relatively inactive at pHi greater than or equal to 7.0. Comparison of the rates of H+ efflux (or equivalent OH- uptake) and Na+ uptake indicate that Na+/Na+ countertransport through this system is negligible at all values of pHi and that the Na+:H+ stoichiometry is 1:1. Measurements of pHi in Na+- loaded cells suspended in Na+-free medium revealed an amiloride- sensitive cytoplasmic acidification, which is indicative of exchange of internal Na+ for external H+. The symmetry of the system was analyzed by measuring the effect of extracellular pH (pHo) on Na+ efflux. Unlike cytoplasmic acidification, lowering pHo failed to activate the antiport. The results indicate that the amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchanger is reversible but asymmetric. The system is virtually inactive at pHi greater than or equal to 7.0 but can be activated by protonation of a modifier site on the cytoplasmic surface. Activation can also occur by depletion of cellular Na+. It is proposed that Na+ may also interact with the modifier site, stabilizing the unprotonated (inactive) form.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The fluorescence of 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) has been used to follow the Na+/H+ antiport activity of isolated heart mitochondria as a Na+-dependent extrusion of matrix H+. The antiport activity measured in this way shows a hyperbolic dependence on external Na+ or Li+ concentration when the external pH (pHo) is 7.2 or higher. The apparent Km for Na+ decreases with increasing pHo to a limit of 4.6 mM. The Ki for external H+ as a competitive inhibitor of Na+/H+ antiport averages 3.0 nM (pHo 8.6). The Vmax at 24 degrees C is 160 ng ion of H+ min-1 (mg of protein)-1 and does not vary with pHo. Li+ reacts with the antiporter with higher affinity, but much lower Vmax, and is a competitive inhibitor of Na+/H+ antiport. The rate of Na+/H+ antiport is optimal when the pHi is near 7.2. When pHo is maintained constant, Na+-dependent extrusion of matrix H+ shows a hyperbolic dependence on [H+]i with an apparent Km corresponding to a pHi of 6.8. The Na+/H+ antiport is inhibited by benzamil and by 5-N-substituted amiloride analogues with I50 values in the range from 50 to 100 microM. The pH profile for this inhibition seems consistent with the availability of a matrix binding site for the amiloride analogues. The mitochondrial Na+/H+ antiport resembles the antiport found in the plasma membrane of mammalian cells in that Na+, Li+, and external H+ appear to compete for a common external binding site and both exchanges are inhibited by amiloride analogues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The intracellular pH (pHi) changes resulting from chemotactic factor-induced activation of Na+/H+ exchange in isolated human neutrophils were characterized. Intracellular pH was measured from the equilibrium distribution of [14C]-5,5-dimethyloxazolidine-2,4-dione and from the fluorescence of 6-carboxyfluorescein. Exposure of cells to 0.1 microM N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP) in 140 mM Na+ medium at extracellular pH (pHo) 7.40 led to a rise in pHi along an exponential time course (rate coefficient approximately 0.55 min-1). By 10 min, a new steady-state pHi was reached (7.75-7.80) that was 0.55-0.60 units higher than the resting pHi of control cells (7.20-7.25). The initial rate of H+ efflux from the cells (approximately 15 meq/liter X min), calculated from the intrinsic intracellular buffering power of approximately 50 mM/pH, was comparable to the rate of net Na+ influx (approximately 17 meq/liter X min), an observation consistent with a 1:1 stoichiometry for Na+/H+ exchange. This counter-transport could be inhibited by amiloride (apparent Ki approximately 75 microM). When either the external ([Na+]o) or internal Na ([Na+]i) concentrations, pHo, or pHi were varied independently, the new steady-state [Na+]i and pHi values in FMLP-stimulated cells were those corresponding to a chemical equilibrium distribution of Na+ and H+ across the cell membrane. By analogy to other activated cells, these results indicate that an alkalinization of pHi in human neutrophils is mediated by a chemotactic factor-induced exchange of internal H+ for external Na+.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of elevating cytoplasmic Ca2+ [( Ca2+]i) on the intracellular pH (pHi) of thymic lymphocytes was investigated. In Na+-containing media, treatment of the cells with ionomycin, a divalent cation ionophore, induced a moderate cytoplasmic alkalinization. In the presence of amiloride or in Na+-free media, an acidification was observed. This acidification is at least partly due to H+ (equivalent) uptake in response to membrane hyperpolarization since: it was enhanced by pretreatment with conductive protonophores, it could be mimicked by valinomycin, and it was decreased by depolarization with K+ or gramicidin. In addition, activation of metabolic H+ production also contributes to the acidification. The alkalinization is due to Na+/H+ exchange inasmuch as it is Na+ dependent, amiloride sensitive, and accompanied by H+ efflux and net Na+ gain. A shift in the pHi dependence underlies the activation of the antiport. The effect of [Ca2+]i on Na+/H+ exchange was not associated with redistribution of protein kinase C and was also observed in cells previously depleted of this enzyme. Treatment with ionomycin induced significant cell shrinking. Prevention of shrinking largely eliminated the activation of the antiport. Moreover, a comparable shrinking produced by hypertonic media also activated the antiport. It is concluded that stimulation of Na+/H+ exchange by elevation of [Ca2+]i is due, at least in part, to cell shrinking and does not require stimulation of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

6.
Using the pH-sensitive absorbance of 5 (and 6)-carboxy-4',5'- dimethylfluorescein, we investigated the regulation of cytoplasmic pH (pHi) in monkey kidney epithelial cells (BSC-1). In the absence of HCO3-, pHi is 7.15 +/- 0.1, which is not significantly different from pHi in 28 mM HCO3-, 5% CO2 (7.21 +/- 0.07). After an acid load, the cells regulate pHi in the absence of HCO3- by a Na+ (or Li+)-dependent, amiloride-inhibitable mechanism (indicative of Na+/H+ antiport). In 28 mM HCO3-, while still dependent on Na+, this regulation is only blocked in part by 1 mM amiloride. A partial block is also observed with 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS) (1 mM). With cells pretreated with DIDS, 1 mM amiloride nearly totally inhibits this regulation. Cl- had no effect on pHi regulation in the acidic range. In HCO3(-)-free saline, Na+ removal leads to an amiloride-insensitive acidification, which is dependent on Ca2+. In 28 mM HCO3-, Na+ (and Ca2+) removal led to a pronounced reversible and DIDS-sensitive acidification. When HCO3- was lowered from 46 to 10 mM at constant pCO2 (5%), pHi dropped by a DIDS-sensitive mechanism. Identical changes in pHo (7.6 to 6.9) in the nominal absence of HCO3- led to smaller changes of pHi. In the presence but not in the absence of HCO3-, removal of Cl- led to a DIDS-sensitive alkalinization. This was also observed in the nominal absence of Na+, which leads to a sustained acidification. It is concluded that in nominally bicarbonate-free saline, the amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ antiport is the predominant mechanism of pHi regulation at acidic pHi, while being relatively inactive at physiological values of pHi. In bicarbonate saline, two other mechanisms effect pHi regulation: a DIDS-sensitive Na+-HCO3- symport, which contributes to cytoplasmic alkalinization, and a DIDS-sensitive Cl-/HCO3- exchange, which is apparently independent of Na+.  相似文献   

7.
Intracellular microelectrode techniques and extracellular pH measurements were used to study the dependence of apical Na+/H+ exchange on mucosal and intracellular pH and on mucosal solution Na+ concentration ([Na+]o). When mucosal solution pH (pHo) was decreased in gallbladders bathed in Na(+)-containing solutions, aNai fell. The effect of pHo is consistent with titration of a single site with an apparent pK of 6.29. In Na(+)-depleted tissues, increasing [Na+]o from 0 to values ranging from 2.5 to 110 mM increased aNai; the relationship was well described by Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The apparent Km was 15 mM at pHo 7.5 and increased to 134 mM at pHo 6.5, without change in Vmax. In Na(+)-depleted gallbladders, elevating [Na+]o from 0 to 25 mM increased aNai and pHi and caused acidification of a poorly buffered mucosal solution upon stopping the superfusion; lowering pHo inhibited both apical Na+ entry and mucosal solution acidification. Both effects can be ascribed to titration of a single site; the apparent pK's were 7.2 and 7.4, respectively. Diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC), a histidine-specific reagent, reduced mucosal acidification by 58 +/- 4 or 39 +/- 6% when exposure to the drug was at pHo 7.5 or 6.5, respectively. Amiloride (1 mM) did not protect against the DEPC inhibition, but reduced both apical Na+ entry and mucosal acidification by 63 +/- 5 and 65 +/- 9%, respectively. In the Na(+)-depleted tissues mean pHi was 6.7. Cells were alkalinized by exposure to mucosal solutions containing high concentrations of nicotine or methylamine. Estimates of apical Na+ entry at varying pHi, upon increasing [Na+]o from 0 to 25 mM, indicate that Na+/H+ exchange is active at pHi 7.4. Intracellular H+ stimulated apical Na+ entry by titration of more than one site (apparent pK 7.1, Hill coefficient 1.7). The results suggest that external Na+ and H+ interact with one site of the Na+/H+ exchanger and that cytoplasmic H+ acts on at least two sites. The external titratable group seems to be an imidazolium, which is apparently different from the amiloride-binding site. The dependence of Na+ entry on pHi supports the notion that the Na+/H+ exchanger is operational under normal transport conditions.  相似文献   

8.
Protons as substitutes for sodium and potassium in the sodium pump reaction   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The role of protons as substitutes for Na+ and/or K+ in the sodium pump reaction was examined using inside-out membrane vesicles derived from human red cells. Na+-like effects of protons suggested previously (Blostein, R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 829-833) were substantiated by the following observations: (i) in the absence of extravesicular (cytoplasmic) Na+, an increase in cytoplasmic [H+] increased both strophanthidin-sensitive ATP hydrolysis (nu) and the steady-state level of phosphoenzyme, EP, and (ii) as [H+] is increased, the Na+/ATP coupling ratio is decreased. K+-like effects of protons were evidenced in the following results: (i) an increase in nu, decrease in EP, and hence increase in EP turnover (nu/EP) occur when intravesicular (extracellular) [H+] is increased; (ii) an increase in the rate of Na+ influx into K+(Rb+)-free inside-out vesicles and (iii) a decrease in Rb+/ATP coupling occur when [H+] is increased. Direct evidence for H+ being translocated in place of cytoplasmic Na+ and extracellular K+ was obtained by monitoring pH changes using fluorescein isothiocyanate-dextran-filled vesicles derived from 4',4-diisothiocyano-2',2-stilbene disulfonate-treated cells. With the initial pHi = pHo = pH 6.2, a strophanthidin-sensitive decrease in pHi was observed following addition of ATP provided the vesicles contained K+. This pH gradient was abolished following addition of Na+. With alkali cation-free inside-out vesicles, a strophanthidin-sensitive increase in pH was observed upon addition of both ATP and Na+. The foregoing changes in pHi were not affected by the addition of tetrabutylammonium to dissipate any membrane potential and were not observed at pH 6.8. These ATP-dependent cardiac glycoside-sensitive proton movements indicate Na,K-ATPase mediated Na+/H+ exchange in the absence of extracellular K+ as well as H+/K+ exchange in the absence of cytoplasmic Na+.  相似文献   

9.
The activity of the Na+/H+ exchange system of rat thymic lymphocytes was determined by means of intracellular (pHi) and extracellular pH (pH0) measurements. In isotonic media, the antiport is virtually quiescent at physiological pHi (7.0-7.1), but is greatly activated by cytoplasmic acidification. At normal pHi, the antiport can also be activated by osmotic shrinking. Osmotic activation occurs after a delay of 20-30 s and is reversed several minutes after iso-osmolarity is restored. The mechanism of activation was analyzed by comparing the kinetic parameters of transport in resting (isotonic) and hyperosmotically stressed cells. The affinities of the external substrate site for Na+ and H+ are not altered in shrunken cells. In contrast, the Hi+ sensitivity of the antiport (which is largely dictated by an allosteric modifier site) was increased, which accounted for the activation. The concentration of free cytoplasmic Ca2+ [( Ca2+]i) increased after osmotic shrinking. This increase was dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+ and Na+ and was blocked by inhibitors of Na+/H+ exchange, which suggests that it is a consequence, rather than the cause, of the activation of the antiport. It is concluded that the shift in the pHi dependence of the modifier site of the Na+/H+ antiport is the primary event underlying the regulatory volume increase that follows osmotic shrinkage.  相似文献   

10.
Properties of the Na+/H+ exchange system in synaptosomes have been studied primarily by using acridine orange fluorescence to follow H+ efflux. Results obtained from 22Na+ uptake experiments and [3H]ethylpropylamiloride binding experiments are also presented for comparison. The basal properties of the Na+/H+ antiport in synaptosomes are similar to those found in other systems; (i) the stoichiometry of Na+/H+ exchange is 1:1; (ii) Li+ can be successfully substituted for Na+; its affinity for the exchanger (KLi+ = 3 mM) is higher than that of Na+ (KNa+ = 12 mM), but the maximal rate of H+ efflux in the presence of Li+ is about 3 times lower than the maximal rate of H+ efflux in the presence of Na+; and (iii) the Na+/H+ antiport is inhibited by amiloride derivatives with the rank order:ethylisopropylamiloride greater than ethylpropylamiloride greater than amiloride greater than benzamil. The most important finding of this paper is that the external pH dependence of the synaptosomal Na+/H+ antiport is controlled by the value of internal pH and vice versa. For example apparent pHo values for half-maximum activation of the Na+/H+ exchanger are pHo = 7.12 when pHi = 6.4 and pHo = 7.95 when pHi = 7.3. Therefore, a 0.9 pH unit increase in internal pH produces a shift of at least a 0.83 pH unit in the external pH dependence. In addition, changing pHo from 7.75 to 8.50 also shifts the half-maximum pHi value for activation of the Na+/H+ antiport from 6.67 to 7.54.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of changes in extracellular pH (pHo) and intracellular pH (pHi) on Na+-dependent and Na+-independent inorganic phosphate (Pi) transport in Ehrlich cells was investigated. In the presence of Na+, acutely reducing pHo from 7.30 to 5.50 results first in a transient (approximately 7 min) stimulation of Pi transport. The enhanced rate of transport is a saturable function of the extracellular [H+]; the Ks equals 2.3 X 10(-6) M (pHo 6.68). However, Pi transport is progressively inhibited as pHi falls below 6.50. The effect of pHi on Pi transport measured at various intracellular [Na+] suggests that inhibition develops as a consequence of H+ interaction with an intracellular Na+ site(s) on the Na+-dependent carrier. At pHo 7.4, about 15% of the steady state Pi flux persists in the absence of Na+. However, when pHo is reduced, transport is stimulated to the same extent and with the same time course and kinetic characteristics as in the presence of Na+. Thus, H+ stimulated Pi transport does not require Na+, raising the possibility that the Na+-independent component is mediated by the anion (Cl-) exchanger.  相似文献   

12.
The tumor promoter 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) stimulates hexose uptake into rat thymocytes. This study explores two possible messengers of this stimulation: changes in cytosolic [Ca2+], and activation of the Na+/H+ antiport. The cytosolic level of Ca2+, determined by the fluorescence of quin-2, was elevated by TPA, and this rise required extracellular Ca2+. In contrast, stimulation of hexose uptake was still observed in Ca2+ -free media even when cytoplasmic [Ca2+] was buffered with quin-2. TPA also raised the cytoplasmic pH, presumably through activation of the Na+/H+ exchange. However, replacement of extracellular Na+ by N-methylglucamine+ or choline+ which prevents the cytoplasmic alkanization did not prevent stimulation of hexose uptake by TPA. Moreover, amiloride, at concentrations that inhibit Na+/H+ exchange in these cells, did not interfere with stimulation of hexose uptake by TPA. In conclusion, stimulation of hexose uptake by phorbol ester in rat thymocytes does not appear to be mediated by changes in cytosolic free Ca2+ or in the activity of the Na+/H+ antiport.  相似文献   

13.
We previously reported that, in a HCO3(-)-free medium, cytoplasmic pH (pHi) of hamster fibroblasts (CCL39) is primarily regulated by an amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ antiport (L'Allemain, G., Paris, S., and Pouysségur, J. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5809-5815). Here we demonstrate the existence of an additional pHi-regulating mechanism in CCL39 cells, namely a Na+-dependent HCO3-/Cl- exchange. Evidence for this system is based on 36Cl- influx studies and on pHi measurements in PS120, a CCL39-derived mutant lacking the Na+/H+ antiport activity. 36Cl- influx rate is a saturable function of external [Cl-] (apparent Km approximately equal to 7 mM), is competitively inhibited by external HCO3- (KI approximately equal to 3 mM), and by stilbene derivatives (KI approximately equal to 20 microM for 4-acetamido-4'-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid). Measurements of pHi recovery after an acute acid load indicate that PS120 cells possess an acid-extruding mechanism dependent on external HCO3-, which is inhibited by stilbene derivatives and requires external Na+. Since 22Na+ influx is stimulated upon addition of HCO3- to acid-loaded cells and this effect is completely abolished by 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid, we conclude that Na+ is co-transported with HCO3-, in exchange for intracellular Cl-. In a HCO3(-)-containing medium, this pHi-regulating mechanism appears to have two essential physiological functions for the Na+/H+ antiport-deficient mutant: protection of the cells against excessive cytoplasmic acidification and establishment of a steady-state pHi permissive for growth, at neutral or slightly acidic pHo values (6.6-7.2).  相似文献   

14.
Activation of neutrophils by most soluble stimuli is associated with a marked increase in intracellular free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i). However, under physiological conditions (Na+-rich media), the potent activator 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) causes no change or a decrease in [Ca2+]i. We report here that the [Ca2+]i response to phorbol esters varies depending on the ionic composition of the medium. A marked increase in [Ca2+]i was detected in Na+-free solutions. Maximal effects were observed when N-methyl-D-glucammonium+ or choline+ were substituted for Na+, whereas an intermediate response was recorded in K+ medium. The increase in [Ca2+]i was substantially (approximately 65%) inhibited by removal of external Ca2+. A [Ca2+]i increase was also elicited by other beta-phorbol diesters and by diacylglycerol, but not by unesterified phorbol or by alpha-phorbol diesters, indicating involvement of protein kinase C. The increase in [Ca2+]i observed in Na+-free media is not due to inhibition of Na+/Ca2+ exchange, since no change in [Ca2+]i in response to TPA was observed in: 1) cells suspended in Li+, which is not countertransported for Ca2+; 2) cells preloaded with Na+ to eliminate the driving force for Na+/Ca2+ exchange; and 3) cells treated with 3',4'-dichlorobenzamyl, an inhibitor of Na+/Ca2+ exchange. Similarly, the [Ca2+]i increase in Na+-free media is not linked to the absence of Na+/H+ exchange and the associated cytoplasmic acidification since: 1) it was not observed in Na+ media in the presence of inhibitors of the Na+/H+ antiport and 2) it was not mimicked by inducing acidification with nigericin. Pretreatment with pertussis toxin largely inhibited the phorbol ester-induced change in [Ca2+]i, while activation of protein kinase C under these conditions was unaffected. It is concluded that in the absence of extracellular Na+ (or Li+), activation of protein kinase C leads to a net Ca2+ influx into the cytoplasm through a process mediated by a GTP-binding or G protein. Opening of a Na+-sensitive Ca2+ channel could partially explain these observations. Alternatively, the nature of the monovalent cation could conceivably affect the conformation of a G protein or of an associated receptor, inducing the appearance of a site susceptible to an activating phosphorylation by protein kinase C.  相似文献   

15.
The course of intracellular pH (pHi) was followed in superfused (36 degrees C) single glomus (type I) cells of the freshly dissociated adult rat carotid body. The cells had been loaded with the pH-sensitive fluorescent dye 2',7'-(2-carboxyethyl)-5 (and -6)-carboxyfluorescein. The high K(+)-nigericin method was used for calibration. The pHi of the glomus cell at pHo 7.40, without CO2, was 7.23 +/- 0.02 (n = 70); in 5% CO2/25 mM HCO3-, pHi was 7.18 +/- 0.08 (n = 9). The pHi was very sensitive to changes in pHo. Without CO2, delta pHi/delta pHo was 0.85 (pHo 6.20-8.00; 32 cells), while in CO2/HCO3- this ratio was 0.82 irrespective of whether pHo (6.80-7.40; 14 cells) was changed at constant PCO2 or at constant [HCO3-]o. The great pHi sensitivity of the glomus cell to pHo is matched only by that of the human red cell. An active Na+/H+ exchanger (apparent Km = 58 +/- 6 mM) is present in glomus cells: Na+ removal or addition of the amiloride derivative 5-(N,N-hexamethylene)-amiloride induced pHi to fall by as much as 0.9. The membrane of these cells also contains a K+/H+ exchanger. Raising [K+]o from 4.7 to 25, 50, or 140 mM reversibly raised pHi by 0.2, 0.3, and 0.6, respectively. Rb+ had no effect, but in corresponding concentrations of Tl+ alkalinization was much faster than in K+. Reducing [K+]o to 1.5 mM lowered pHi by 0.1. These pHi changes were shown not to be due to changes in membrane voltage, and were even more striking in the absence of Na+. Intrinsic buffering power (amount of strong base required to produce, in the nominal absence of CO2, a small pHi rise) increased from 3 to approximately 21 mM as pHi was lowered, but remained nearly unchanged below pHi 6.60. The fitted expression assumed the presence of one "equivalent" intracellular buffer (pK 6.41, 41 mM). The exceptional pHi sensitivity to pHo suggests that the pHi of the glomus cell is a link in the chemoreceptor's response to external acidity.  相似文献   

16.
Na/H exchange in cultured chick heart cells. pHi regulation   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The purpose of this study was to establish the existence of Na/H exchange in cardiac muscle and to evaluate the contribution of Na/H exchange to pHi regulation. The kinetics of pHi changes in cultured chick heart cells were monitored microfluorometrically with 6-carboxyfluorescein and correlated with Nai content changes analyzed by atomic absorption spectrophotometry; transmembrane H+ movements were evaluated under pH stat conditions. After induction of an intracellular acid load by pretreatment with NH4Cl, a regulatory cytoplasmic alkalinization occurred with a t1/2 of 2.9 min. pHi regulation required external Na+ and was concomitant with transmembrane H+ extrusion as well as a rapid rise in Nai content in an Na/H ratio of 1:1. Microelectrode recordings of membrane potential demonstrated directly the electroneutral character of pHi regulation. Acid-induced net Na+ uptake could be either stimulated by further decreasing pHi or inhibited by decreasing pHo; Na+ uptake was unaffected by tetrodotoxin (10 micrograms/ml), quinidine (10(-3) M), DIDS (10(-4) M), Clo-free solution, or HCO3-free solution. Amiloride (10(-3) M) maximally inhibited both pHi regulation and Na+ uptake; the ID50 for amiloride inhibition of Na+ uptake was 3 microM. Nao-dependent H+ extrusion showed half-maximal activation at 15 mM Nao; Li+, but not K+ or choline+, could substitute for Na+ to support H+ extrusion. Cao-free solution also stimulated acid-induced Na+ uptake. We conclude that pHi regulation following an acid load in cardiac muscle cells is by an amiloride-sensitive, electroneutral Na/H exchange. Stimulation of Na/H exchange up to 54 pmol/cm2 X s indicates the rapidity of this exchange across cardiac cell membranes. Na/H exchange may also participate in steady state maintenance of pHi.  相似文献   

17.
Pretreatment of isolated human neutrophils (resting pHi congruent to 7.25 at pHo 7.40) with 30 mM NH4Cl for 30 min leads to an intracellular acidification (pHi congruen to 6.60) when the NH4Cl prepulse is removed. Thereafter, in 140 mM Na+ medium, pHi recovers exponentially with time (initial rate, approximately 0.12 pH/min) to reach the normal resting pHi by approximately 20 min, a process that is accomplished mainly, if not exclusively, though an exchange of internal H+ for external Na+. This Na+/H+ countertransport is stimulated by external Na+ (Km congruent to 21 mM) and by external Li+ (Km congruent to 14 mM), though the maximal transport rate for Na+ is about twice that for Li+. Both Na+ and Li+ compete as substrates for the same translocation sites on the exchange carrier. Other alkali metal cations, such as K+, Rb+, or Cs+, do not promote pHi recovery, owing to an apparent lack of affinity for the carrier. The exchange system is unaffected by ouabain or furosemide, but can be competitively inhibited by the diuretic amiloride (Ki congruent to 8 microM). The influx of Na+ or Li+ is accompanied by an equivalent counter-reflux of H+, indicating a 1:1 stoichiometry for the exchange reaction, a finding consistent with the lack of voltage sensitivity (i.e., electroneutrality) of pHi recovery. These studies indicate that the predominant mechanism in human neutrophils for pHi regulation after intracellular acidification is an amiloride-sensitive alkali metal cation/H+ exchange that shares a number of important features with similar recovery processes in a variety of other mammalian cell types.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanisms underlying cytoplasmic pH (pHi) regulation in elicited rat peritoneal macrophages were investigated by electronic sizing and fluorescence determinations. Acid-loaded cells rapidly regained normal pHi by means of an amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchange. When stimulated by 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate, macrophages displayed a biphasic pHi change: a marginal acidification followed by an alkalinization. The latter results from activation of Na+/H+ exchange, since it is Na+-dependent and prevented by amiloride. When the antiport is inhibited, the full magnitude of the initial acidification can be appreciated. This acidification is independent of the nature of the ionic composition of the medium and probably reflects accumulation of protons generated during the metabolic burst. Under physiological conditions, these protons are rapidly extruded by the Na+/H+ antiport.  相似文献   

19.
The properties of the Na+/H+ exchange system in the glial cell lines C6 and NN were studied from 22Na+ uptake experiments and measurements of the internal pH (pHi) using intracellularly trapped biscarboxyethyl-carboxyfluorescein. In both cell types, the Na+/H+ exchanger is the major mechanism by which cells recover their pHi after an intracellular acidification. The exchanger is inhibited by amiloride and its derivatives. The pharmacological profile (ethylisopropylamiloride greater than amiloride greater than benzamil) is identical for the two cell lines. Both Na+ and Li+ can be exchanged for H+. Increasing the external pH increases the activity of the exchanger in the two cell lines. In NN cells the external pH dependence of the exchanger is independent of the pHi. In contrast, in C6 cells, changing the pHi value from 7.0 to 6.5 produces a pH shift of 0.6 pH units in the external pH dependence of the exchanger in the acidic range. Decreasing pHi activates the Na+/H+ exchanger in both cell lines. Increasing the osmolarity of the external medium with mannitol produces an activation of the exchanger in C6 cells, which leads to a cell alkalinization. Mannitol action on 22Na+ uptake and the pHi were not observed in the presence of amiloride derivatives. Mannitol produces a modification of the properties of interaction of the antiport with both internal and external H+. It shifts the pHi dependence of the system to the alkaline range and the external pH (pHo) dependence to the acidic range. It also suppresses the interdependence of pHi and pHo controls of the exchanger's activity. NN cells that possess an Na+/H+ exchange system with different properties do not respond to mannitol by an increased activity of the Na+/H+ exchanger. The action of mannitol on C6 cells is unlikely to be mediated by an activation of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

20.
Intracellular pH (pHi) of human platelets was measured with the fluorescent dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)5,6-carboxyfluorescein under various conditions. Stimulation by thrombin at 23 degrees C caused a biphasic change in pHi (initial pHi 7.09); a rapid fall of 0.01-0.04 units (correlated with the rise of [Ca2+]i measured with quin2) followed after 10-15 s by a sustained rise of 0.1-0.15 units pHi. The fall of pHi and [Ca2+]i mobilization was reduced by early (5 s) addition of hirudin, but the later elevated pHi was not reversed by hirudin added after 30 s, although this strips thrombin from receptors and rapidly returns [Ca2+]i to basal levels. In Na+-free medium, or in presence of the Na+/H+ antiport inhibitors, 5-(N,N-dimethyl)amiloride (DMA) or 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)amiloride (EIPA), thrombin caused a greater fall of pHi (0.22-0.26 units) that was sustained. DMA or EIPA could also reverse the alkalinization response to thrombin. Ca2+ ionophores (ionomycin, A23187) decreased platelet pHi by 0.02-0.15 units, but without an increase of pHi comparable to that following thrombin; DMA and EIPA enhanced the fall of pHi (0.14-0.33 units). Cytoplasmic acidification produced by nigericin (K+/H+ ionophore) was followed by return towards normal that was abolished by Na+/H+ antiport inhibitors. The phorbol diester phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate had little effect on resting pHi but increased the rate of recovery 2-3-fold after cytoplasmic acidification by nigericin, ionomycin, or sodium propionate. These results indicate that elevation of [Ca2+]i by thrombin enhances H+ production, but the subsequent alkalinization is independent of receptor occupancy or elevated [Ca2+]i and stimulation of the Na+/H+ antiporter by thrombin probably involves some mechanism apart from regulation by H+ and protein kinase C.  相似文献   

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