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1.
1. Membrane transport of Na ions was investigated in red blood cells of bears by methods of measurement of unidirectional isotopic fluxes. 2. Like red blood cells of dogs, bear red cells contain a high Na concentration and low concentrations of K and ATP. 3. As in dog red cells, Na efflux from bear cells was not inhibited by ouabain but was activated by the presence of Ca in the medium, possibly indicating the presence of a Na-Ca exchange mechanism. 4. ATP depletion of cells was accelerated by Ca in the medium, consistent with the presence of a strong ATP-dependent Ca pump. 5. As in other carnivore red cells, Na influx into bear cells was strongly activated by shrinkage and inhibited by swelling. Shrinkage-activated influx was blocked by amiloride. 6. Amiloride-sensitive influx was activated by cytoplasmic Ca and also correlated with the presence of a Na-dependent, amiloride-sensitive H loss. 7. Amiloride-sensitive Na influx exhibited a strong seasonal cycle with a minimum in the middle of the hibernation period, suggesting a possible avenue of cellular energy conservation.  相似文献   

2.
Sodium and calcium movements in dog red blood cells   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Determinants of 45Ca influx, 45Ca efflux, and 22Na efflux were examined in dog red blood cells. 45Ca influx is strongly influenced by the Na concentration on either side of the membrane, being stimulated by intracellular Na and inhibited by extracellular Na. A saturation curve is obtained when Ca influx is plotted as a function of medium Ca concentration. The maximum Ca influx is a function of pH (increasing with greater alkalinity) and cell volume (increasing with cell swelling). Quinidine strongly inhibits Ca influx. Efflux of 45Ca is stimulated by increasing concentrations of extracellular Na. 22Na efflux is stimulated by either Ca or Na in the medium, and the effects of the two ions are mutually exclusive rather than additive. Quinidine inhibits Ca-activated 22Na efflux. The results are considered in terms of a model for Ca-Na exchange, and it is concluded that the system shows many features of such a coupled ion transport system. However, the stoichiometric ratio between Ca influx and Ca-dependent Na efflux is highly variable under different experimental conditions. Because the Ca fluxes may reflect a combination of ATP-dependent, outward transport and Na-linked passive movements, the true stoichiometry of an exchanger may not be ascertainable in the absence of a specific Ca pump inhibitor. The meaning of these observations for Ca-dependent volume regulation by dog red blood cells is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Hypertonic shrinkage of dog red cells caused rapid activation of Na/H exchange and rapid deactivation of [K-Cl] cotransport. Hypotonic swelling caused delayed deactivation of Na/H exchange and delayed activation of [K-Cl] cotransport. Okadaic acid stimulated shrinkage-induced Na/H exchange and inhibited swelling-induced [K-Cl] cotransport. The data are compatible with the kinetic model of Jennings and Al-Rohil (1990. J. Gen. Physiol. 95:1021-1040) for volume regulation of [K-Cl] cotransport in rabbit red cells and suggest that in dog red cells Na/H exchange and [K-Cl] cotransport are controlled by a common regulatory system. The proposal of Jennings and Schulz (1991. J. Gen. Physiol. 96:799-817) that activation/deactivation of volume-sensitive transport involves phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of a regulatory protein is supported by these observations.  相似文献   

4.
Binding of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate to glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, the membrane protein known as Band 6, causes shifts in the 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of the substrate (Fossel, E.T. and Solomon, A.K (1977) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 464, 82--92). We have studied the resonance shifts produced by varying the sodium/potassium ratio, at constant ionic strength, in order to examine the relationship between the cation transport system and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Alteration of the potassium concentration at the extracellular face of the vesicle affects the conformation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase at the cytoplasmic face, thus showing that a conformation changed induced by a change in extracellular potassium can be transmitted across the membrane. Alterations of the sodium concentration at the cytoplasmic face also affect the enzyme conformation, whereas sodium changes at the extracellular face are without effect. In contrast, there is no sidedness difference in the effect of potassium concentrations. The half-values for these effects are like those for activation of the red cell (Na4 + K+)-ATPase. We have also produced ionic concentration gradients across the vesicle similar to those Glynn and Lew (1970) J. Physiol. London 207, 393--402) found to be effective in running the cation pump backwards to produce adenosine triphosphate in the human red cell. The sodium/potassium concentration dependence of this process in red cells is mimicked by 31P resonance shifts in the (glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate/glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase/inside out vesicle) system. These experiments provide strong support for the existence of a functional linkage between the membrane (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase at the cytoplasmic face.  相似文献   

5.
Calpain, the micromolar Ca2+-requiring form of Ca2+-stimulated neutral proteinase purified from human red cells, is remarkably inactivated during autoxidation of divicine (2,6-diamino-4,5-dihydroxypyrimidine), an aglycone implicated in the pathogenesis of favism. Inactivation of purified calpain is produced, in decreasing order of efficiency, by transient, probably semiquinonic species arising from autoxidation of divicine, by the H2O2 that is formed upon autoxidation itself, and by quinonic divicine, respectively. Purified procalpain, the millimolar Ca2+-requiring form that can be converted to the fully active calpain form by a variety of mechanisms, is less susceptible than calpain itself to inactivation by the same by-products of divicine autoxidation. When intact red cells are exposed to autoxidizing divicine, procalpain undergoes a significant loss of activity. At 1 mM divicine, intracellular inactivation is observed with procalpain only, while the activity of a number of red cell enzymes is unaffected. Inactivation of procalpain is consistently greater in red cells from glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase-deficient subjects than in normal cells. Restoration of normal levels of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity by means of entrapment of homogeneous human glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in the deficient red cells results in normal stability of intracellular reduced glutathione; decreased susceptibility of procalpain to inactivation by autoxidizing divicine. These findings suggest that in the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase-deficient red cells the procalpain-calpain system is a major target of divicine cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

6.
Plasma membrane vesicles from a glucose-responsive insulinoma exhibited properties consistent with the presence of a membrane Na+/Ca2+ exchange. The exchange was rapid, reversible, and was dependent on the external Ca2+ concentration (Km = 4.1 +/- 1.1 microM). External Na+ inhibited the uptake in a dose-dependent manner (IC50 = 15 mM). Dissipation of the Na+ gradient by 10 microM monensin decreased Na+/Ca2+ exchange from 0.74 +/- 0.17 nmoles/mg protein/s to 0.11 +/- 0.05 nmoles/mg protein/s. Exchange was not influenced by veratridine, tetrodotoxin and ouabain, or by modifiers of cAMP. No effect was seen using the calcium channel blockers, nitrendipine or nifedipine. Glucose had no direct effect on Na+/Ca2+ exchange, while glyceraldehyde, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate and dihydroxyacetone inhibited the exchange. Na+ induced efflux of calcium was seen in Ca2+ loaded vesicles and was half maximal at [Na+] of 11.1 +/- 0.75 mM. Ca2+ efflux was dependent on [Na+], with a Hill coefficient of 2.7 +/- 0.07 indicating that activation of Ca2+ release involves a minimum of three sites. The electrogenicity of this exchange was demonstrated using the lipophilic cation tetraphenylphosphonium [( 3H]-TPP), a membrane potential sensitive probe. [3H]-TPP uptake increased transiently during Na+/Ca2+ exchange indicating that the exchange generated a membrane potential. These results show that Na+/Ca2+ exchange operates in the beta cell and may be an important regulator of intracellular free Ca2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
Swelling-activated [K-Cl] cotransport and shrinkage-activated Na/H exchange were studied in dog red cells with altered internal Mg or Li content. The two pathways responded in a coordinated fashion. When cells were depleted of Mg, [K-Cl] cotransport was stimulated and Na/H exchange was inhibited. Raising internal Mg had the opposite effect: [K-Cl] cotransport was inhibited and Na/H exchange was stimulated. Li loading, previously shown to stimulate Na/H exchange, inhibited [K-Cl] cotransport. From these reciprocal effects and from other evidence, we surmise that the regulation of Na/H exchange and [K-Cl] cotransport is conducted and coordinated by a discrete mechanism that responds to changes in cell volume and is sensitive to cytoplasmic Mg and Li concentrations.  相似文献   

8.
Using polyethylene glycol-mediated fusion of ATP-ase-enriched (native) microsomes with red blood cells, we have delivered sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca-ATPase and kidney Na,K-ATPase into the mammalian erythrocyte membrane. Experiments involving delivery of the SR Ca-ATPase into human red cells were first carried out to assess the feasibility of the fusion protocol. Whereas there was little detectable 45Ca2+ uptake into control cells in either the absence or presence of extracellular ATP, a marked time-dependent uptake of 45Ca2+ was observed in the presence of ATP in cells fused with SR Ca-ATPase. Comparison of the kinetics of uptake into microsome-fused cells versus native SR vesicles supports the conclusion of true delivery of pumps into the red cell membrane. Thus, the time to reach steady state was more than two orders of magnitude longer in the (large) cells versus the native SR vesicles. Na,K-ATPase from dog and rat kidney microsomes were fused with red cells of humans, sheep, and dogs. Using dog kidney microsomes fused with dog red cells which are practically devoid of Na,K-ATPase, functional incorporation of sodium pumps was evidenced in ouabain-sensitive Rb+ uptake and Na+ efflux energized by intracellular ATP, as well as in ATP-stimulated Na+ influx and Rb+ efflux from inside-out membrane vesicles prepared from the fusion-treated cells. From analysis of the biphasic kinetics of ouabain-sensitive Na+ efflux under conditions of limited intracellular Na+ concentration, it is concluded that the kidney pumps are incorporated into a relatively small fraction (approximately 15%) of the red cells. This system provides a uniquely useful system for studying the behavior of native sodium pumps in a compartment (red cell) of small surface/volume ratio. The newly incorporated native kidney pumps, while of the same isoform as the endogenous red cell pump, behave differently from the endogenous red cell sodium pump with respect to their very low "uncoupled" Na+/O flux activity.  相似文献   

9.
Ca2+ efflux from dog red blood cells loaded with Ca2+ using the A23187 ionophore could be separated into two main components: (1) Mg- and ATP-dependent (active transport) and (2) dependent on external Na (K1/2 around 15 mM); at 80 microM internal free Ca the relative magnitudes of these fluxes were 70% and 30% respectively. The Na-dependent Ca2+ efflux had the following additional properties: (i) it was partially inhibited by ATP depletion or preincubation with vanadate, but it was not affected by Mg2+ depletion; (ii) it failed to be stimulated by external monovalent cations other than Na: (iii) it was stimulated by reduction in the internal Na+ concentration. Both active and Na-dependent Ca2+ efflux remained unchanged in hypotonic solutions or in solutions with alkaline pH (8.5). In cells containing ATP and Mg2+, external Ca2+ inhibited Ca2+ efflux (K1/2 around 1 mM); on the other hand, in Mg-free dog red cells external Ca2+ stimulated Ca2+ efflux (K1/2 about 30 microM). In Mg-depleted red cells incubated in the absence of external Na2+, Ca2+ influx as a function of external Ca2+ followed a monotonically saturable function (K1/2 around 20 microM): addition of Na resulted in (i) inhibition of Ca2+ influx and (ii) a sigmoid relationship between flux and external Ca2+. Intracellular Ca2+ stimulated the external Na-dependent Ca2+ efflux along a sigmoid curve (K1/2 around 30 microM); on the other hand the Ca pump had a biphasic response to internal Ca2+: stimulation at low internal Ca2+ (K1/2 between 1 and 10 microM), followed by a decline at internal Ca2+ concentrations higher than 50 microM.  相似文献   

10.
In the course of studying mammalian erythrocytes we noted prominent differences in the red cells of the rat. Analysis of ghosts by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that membranes of rat red cells were devoid of band 6 or the glycolytic enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate: NAD+ oxidoreductase (phosphorylating), EC 1.2.1.12). Direct measurements of this enzyme showed that glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in rat erythrocytes was about 25% of that in human cells; all of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in rat erythrocytes was within the cytoplasm and none was membrane bound; and in the human red cell, about 1/3 of the enzyme activity was within the cytoplasm and 2/3 membrane bound. The release of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from fresh rat erythrocytes immediately following saponin lysis was also determined using the rapid filtration technique recently described. The extrapolated zero-time intercepts of these reactions confirmed that, in the rat erythrocyte, none of the cellular glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was membrane bound. Failure of rat glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase to bind to the membranes of the intact rat erythrocyte seems to be due to cytoplasmic metabolites which interact with the enzyme and render it incapable of binding to the membrane.  相似文献   

11.
In response to osmotic perturbation, the Amphiuma red blood cell regulates volume back to "normal" levels. After osmotic swelling, the cells lose K, Cl, and osmotically obliged H2O (regulatory volume decrease [RVD] ). After osmotic shrinkage, cell volume is regulated as a result of Na, Cl, and H2O uptake (regulatory volume increase [RVI] ). As previously shown (Cala, 1980 alpha), ion fluxes responsible for volume regulation are electroneutral, with alkali metal ions obligatorily counter-coupled to H, whereas net Cl flux is in exchange for HCO3. When they were exposed to the Ca ionophore A23187, Amphiuma red blood cells lost K, Cl, and H2O with kinetics (time course) similar to those observed during RVD. In contrast, when cells were osmotically swollen in Ca-free media, net K loss during RVD was inhibited by approximately 60%. A role for Ca in the activation of K/H exchange during RVD was suggested from these experiments, but interpretation was complicated by the fact that an increase in cellular Ca resulted in an increase in the membrane conductance to K (GK). To determine the relative contributions of conductive K flux and K/H exchange to total K flux, electrical studies were performed and the correspondence of net K flux to thermodynamic models for conductive vs. K/H exchange was evaluated. These studies led to the conclusion that although Ca activates both conductive and electroneutral K flux pathways, only the latter pathways contribute significantly to net K flux. On the basis of observations that A23187 did not activate K loss from cells during RVI (when the Na/H exchange was functioning) and that amiloride inhibited K/H exchange by swollen cells only when cells had previously been shrunk in the presence of amiloride, I concluded that Na/H and K/H exchange are mediated by the same membrane transport moiety.  相似文献   

12.
The presence of glycolytic enzymes and a GLUT-1-type glucose transporter in rod and cone outer segments was determined by enzyme activity assays, glucose uptake measurements, Western blotting, and immunofluorescence microscopy. Enzyme activities of six glycolytic enzymes including hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, aldolase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate kinase, pyruvate kinase, and lactate dehydrogenase, were found to be present in purified rod outer segment (ROS) preparations. Immunofluorescence microscopy of bovine and chicken retina sections labeled with monoclonal antibodies against glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate kinase, and lactate dehydrogenase have confirmed that these enzymes are present in rod and cone outer segments and not simply contaminants from the inner segments or other cells. Rod outer segments were also found to contain glucose transport activity as detected by 3-O-[14C]methylglucose uptake and exchange. The glucose transporter had a Km of 6.3 mM and a Vmax of 0.15 nmol of 3-O-methylglucose/s/mg of ROS membrane protein for net uptake and a Km of 29 mM and a Vmax of 1.06 nmol of 3-O-methylglucose/s/mg of ROS membrane protein for equilibrium exchange. These Km values for net uptake and equilibrium exchange are similar to values obtained for human red blood cells and are characteristic of GLUT-1-type glucose transporter. The transport was inhibited by both cytochalasin B and phloretin. Western blot analysis and immunofluorescence microscopy using type-specific glucose transporter antibodies indicated that both rod and cone outer segment plasma membranes have a GLUT-1 glucose transporter of Mr 45K as found in red blood cells and brain microsomal membranes. Solid-phase radioimmune competitive inhibition studies indicated that rod outer segment plasma membranes contained 15% the number of glucose transporters found in human red blood cell membranes and had an estimated density of 400 glucose transporter per micron2 of plasma membrane. These studies support the view that outer segments can generate energy in the form of ATP and GTP by anaerobic glycolysis to supply at least some of the energy requirements for phototransduction and other metabolic processes.  相似文献   

13.
The properties of Na-Ca-K exchange current through the plasma membrane of intact rod outer segments (ROS) isolated from bovine retinas were studied with the optical probe neutral red. Small cellular organelles such as bovine ROS do not offer an adequate collecting area to measure Na-Ca-K exchange currents with electrophysiological techniques. This study demonstrates that Na-Ca-K exchange current in bovine ROS can be measured with the dye neutral red and dual-wavelength spectrophotometry. The binding of neutral red is sensitive to transport of cations across the plasma membrane of ROS by the effect of the translocated cations on the surface potential of the intracellular disk membranes (1985. J. Membr. Biol. 88: 249-262). Electrogenic Na+ fluxes through the ROS plasma membrane were measured with a resolution of 10(5) Na+ ions/ROS per s, equivalent to a current of approximately 0.01 pA; maximal electrogenic Na-Ca-K exchange flux in bovine ROS was equivalent to a maximal exchange current of 1-2 pA. Electrogenic Na+ fluxes were identified as Na-Ca-K exchange current based on a comparison between electrogenic Na+ flux and Na(+)-stimulated Ca2+ release with respect to flux rate, Na+ dependence, and ion selectivity. Neutral red monitored the net entry of a single positive charge carried by Na+ for each Ca2+ ion released (i.e., monitored the Na-Ca-K exchange current). Na-Ca-K exchange in the plasma membrane of bovine ROS had the following properties: (a) Inward Na-Ca-K exchange current required internal Ca2+ (half-maximal stimulation at a free Ca2+ concentration of 0.9 microM), whereas outward Na-Ca-K exchange current required both external Ca2+ (half-maximal stimulation at a free Ca2+ concentration of 1.1 microM) and external K+. (b) Inward Na-Ca-K exchange current depended in a sigmoidal manner on the external Na+ concentration, identical to Na(+)-stimulated Ca2+ release measured with Ca(2+)-indicating dyes. (c) The neutral red method was modified to measure Ca(2+)-activated K+ fluxes (half-maximal stimulation at 2.7 microM free Ca2+) via the Na-Ca-K exchanger in support of the notion that the rod Na-Ca exchanger is in effect a Na-Ca-K exchanger. (d) Competitive interactions between Ca2+ and Na+ ions on the exchanger protein are described.  相似文献   

14.
It is not known whether the activation of Na/H exchange by shrinkage in dog red cells is due to the packing of cell contents or a change in cell configuration. To make this distinction we prepared resealed ghosts that resembled intact cells in hemoglobin concentration and surface area, but had one-third their volume. A shrinkage-induced, amiloride-sensitive Na flux in the ghosts was activated at a much smaller volume in the ghosts than in the intact cells, but at the same concentration (by weight) of dry solids in both preparations. Na/H exchange in ghosts containing a mixture of 40% albumin and 60% hemoglobin (weight/weight) was activated by osmotic shrinkage at a dry solid concentration similar to that of intact cells or of ghosts containing only hemoglobin. We conclude that the process of Na/H exchange activation by cell shrinkage originates with an increase in the concentration of intracellular protein and not with a change in membrane configuration or tension. The macromolecular crowding that accompanies the reduction in cell volume probably alters the activities of key enzymes that in turn modulate the Na/H exchanger.  相似文献   

15.
Coupled Na+ exit/Ca2+ entry (Na/Ca exchange operating in the Ca2+ influx mode) was studied in giant barnacle muscle cells by measuring 22Na+ efflux and 45Ca2+ influx in internally perfused, ATP-fueled cells in which the Na+ pump was poisoned by 0.1 mM ouabain. Internal free Ca2+, [Ca2+]i, was controlled with a Ca-EGTA buffering system containing 8 mM EGTA and varying amounts of Ca2+. Ca2+ sequestration in internal stores was inhibited with caffeine and a mitochondrial uncoupler (FCCP). To maximize conditions for Ca2+ influx mode Na/Ca exchange, and to eliminate tracer Na/Na exchange, all of the external Na+ in the standard Na+ sea water (NaSW) was replaced by Tris or Li+ (Tris-SW or LiSW, respectively). In both Na-free solutions an external Ca2+ (Cao)-dependent Na+ efflux was observed when [Ca2+]i was increased above 10(-8) M; this efflux was half-maximally activated by [Ca2+]i = 0.3 microM (LiSW) to 0.7 microM (Tris-SW). The Cao-dependent Na+ efflux was half-maximally activated by [Ca2+]o = 2.0 mM in LiSW and 7.2 mM in Tris-SW; at saturating [Ca2+]o, [Ca2+]i, and [Na+]i the maximal (calculated) Cao-dependent Na+ efflux was approximately 75 pmol#cm2.s. This efflux was inhibited by external Na+ and La3+ with IC50's of approximately 125 and 0.4 mM, respectively. A Nai-dependent Ca2+ influx was also observed in Tris-SW. This Ca2+ influx also required [Ca2+]i greater than 10(-8) M. Internal Ca2+ activated a Nai-independent Ca2+ influx from LiSW (tracer Ca/Ca exchange), but in Tris-SW virtually all of the Cai-activated Ca2+ influx was Nai-dependent (Na/Ca exchange). Half-maximal activation was observed with [Na+]i = 30 mM. The fact that internal Ca2+ activates both a Cao-dependent Na+ efflux and a Nai-dependent Ca2+ influx in Tris-SW implies that these two fluxes are coupled; the activating (intracellular) Ca2+ does not appear to be transported by the exchanger. The maximal (calculated) Nai-dependent Ca2+ influx was -25 pmol/cm2.s. At various [Na+]i between 6 and 106 mM, the ratio of the Cao-dependent Na+ efflux to the Nai-dependent Ca2+ influx was 2.8-3.2:1 (mean = 3.1:1); this directly demonstrates that the stoichiometry (coupling ratio) of the Na/Ca exchange is 3:1. These observations on the coupling ratio and kinetics of the Na/Ca exchanger imply that in resting cells the exchanger turns over at a low rate because of the low [Ca2+]i; much of the Ca2+ extrusion at rest (approximately 1 pmol/cm2.s) is thus mediated by an ATP-driven Ca2+ pump.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
In glucose-deprived cerebellar granule cells, substitution of extracellular Na+ with Li+ or Cs+ prevented N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-induced excitotoxicity. NMDA stimulated 45Ca2+ accumulation and ATP depletion in a Na-dependent manner, and caused neuronal death, even if applied while Na,K-ATPase was inhibited by 1 mM ouabain. The cells treated with NMDA in the presence of ouabain accumulated sizable 45Ca2+ load but most of them failed to elevate cytosolic [Ca2+] upon mitochondrial depolarization. Na/Ca exchange inhibitor, KB-R7943, inhibited Na-dependent and NMDA-induced 45Ca2+ accumulation but only if Na,K-ATPase activity was compromised by ouabain. In cells energized by glucose and exposed to NMDA without ouabain, KB-R7943 reduced NMDA-elicited ionic currents by 19% but failed to inhibit 45Ca2+ accumulation. It appears that a large part of NMDA-induced Ca2+ influx in depolarized and glucose-deprived cells is mediated by reverse Na/Ca exchange. A high level of reverse Na/Ca exchange operation is maintained by a sustained Na+ influx via NMDA channels and depolarization of the plasma membrane. In cells energized by glucose, however, most Ca2+ enters directly via NMDA channels because Na,K-ATPase regenerating Na+ and K+ concentration gradients prevents Na/Ca exchange reversal. Since under these conditions Na/Ca exchange extrudes Ca2+, its inhibition destabilizes Ca2+ homeostasis.  相似文献   

17.
An in vitro cultured rat perirenal preadipocyte (PA) was established as a model system to investigate the role of the intracellular pH (pHi) and of the Na~ /H~ exchanger during PA proliferation and differentiation, pH sensitive probe, 2' ,7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein(BCECF), was employed to measure the pHi of PA and to determine the Na~ /H~ exchange activity. The results showed that there was Na~ /H~ exchange activity in the plasma membrane of PA, FCS stimulated DNA synthesis measured by ~3H-TdR incorporation, and the activation of Na~ /H~ exchanger resulted in phi increase (nearly 0.2 pH unit) within 2 min. Ethyl-isopropyl-amiloride (EIPA), a specific Na~ /H~ exchange inhibitor, inhibited Na~ /H~ exchange activity and DNA synthesis. In the absence of serum insulin did not stimulate DNA synthesis but did induce PA differentiation characterized by the appearance of adiposome in the cell and the enhancement of glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G_3PDHase) activity. Meantime, insu  相似文献   

18.
Enzymatically isolated ventricular cells from rats, dogs, and rabbits were electrically stimulated and their membrane potentials were recorded simultaneously with their contractions. Specific pharmacological interventions were used to assess the relative roles of transsarcolemmal Ca2+ entry and the Ca2+ release by the sarcoplasmic reticulum in activating contractions, in these myocytes. We used ryanodine and caffeine to influence Ca2+ release by the sarcoplasmic reticulum, BAY K 8644 and epinephrine to increase Ca2+ entry through Ca2+ channels, and veratridine, ouabain, and monensin to increase Ca2+ entry through Na+-Ca2+ exchange. Ryanodine (1 microM) completely inhibited the shortenings in rat and dog myocytes, but the contractions in rabbit myocytes were much less sensitive to this alkaloid. Similar inhibitory effects of ryanodine were observed in the presence of various inotropic agents with two exceptions: caffeine's effect on the dog myocytes was relatively insensitive to ryanodine and the long-lasting tonic contractions that veratridine triggered in the myocytes of all three species remained completely unaffected by ryanodine. The data indicate that contractile activation in rat and dog ventricular cells is strongly dependent on Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, while contractility in rabbit myocytes seems to be more dependent on Ca2+ entry through the sarcolemma. The ryanodine-resistant tonic contractions triggered in the myocytes of all three species in the presence of veratridine may be activated by an increased Ca2+ entry via Na+-Ca2+ exchange.  相似文献   

19.
Ca2+-activated Na+ fluxes in human red cells. Amiloride sensitivity   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The effect of Ca2+ on the ouabain- and bumetanide-resistant Na+ fluxes in intact red cells was studied at relatively constant internal Ca2+, membrane potential, and cell volume. The red cell calcium concentration was modified using the ionophore A23187. In fresh red cells, the Na+ influx and efflux (1.2 +/- 0.13 and 0.26 +/- 0.07 mmol/liter cells x h, respectively) were not affected by amiloride (1 mM). When external Ca2+ was raised from 0 to 150 microM, in the presence of A23187, both the Na+ influx and efflux were stimulated (about 3.5-fold). The Ca2+-activated Na+ efflux and influx had an apparent Km for activation by Ca2+o of about 25 microM. The Ca2+-dependent Na+ transport was inhibited 30-60% by amiloride (ID50 = 17.3 +/- 8 microM). Amiloride, however, had no effect on the Ca2+-dependent K+ influx. The amiloride-sensitive (AS) transport pathway was a linear function of the Na+o concentration in the range from 0 to 75 mM. The Ca2+i activation seems to depend on the metabolic integrity of red cells. 1) It does not take place in ATP-depleted red cells; 2) ATP-repletion of ATP-depleted red cells fully restored AS Na influx; and 3) ATP-enrichment (ATP-red cells) enhanced the AS Na influx by about 100%. The Ca2+-activated AS Na+ influx was not affected by either DIDS or trifluoperazine. The present results indicate that in human erythrocytes an increase in internal Ca2+ activates on otherwise silent AS Na+-transport system, which is dependent on the metabolic integrity of the red cells.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated temperature dependence of Ca2+ uptake by the cardiac sarcolemmal Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger from dog, rabbit and bullfrog. In native rabbit sarcolemmal vesicles, Ca2+ affinity of the Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger is unchanged from 7 to 37 degrees C; however, the initial velocity of Ca2+ uptake declines much more steeply below 22 degrees C than above 22 degrees C. In native dog sarcolemma, the temperature dependence of Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange velocity is similar to that of native rabbit. However, in frog heart the velocity of Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange declines much more slowly with decreasing temperature at both temperature ranges. Reconstitution of the Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger into artificial lipid vesicles consisting of either asolectin or phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylcholine, and cholesterol has little effect on temperature dependence of Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange velocity in any of the three species. We conclude that the lesser temperature sensitivity of the cardiac sarcolemmal Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger of a poikilothermic species is at least partly an intrinsic property of the transport protein.  相似文献   

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