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1.
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   

2.
Chloride-dependent K transport ([K-Cl] cotransport) in dog red cells is activated by cell swelling. Whether the volume signal is generated by a change in cell configuration or by the dilution of some cytosolic constituent is not known. To differentiate between these two alternatives we prepared resealed ghosts that, compared with intact red cells, had the same surface area and similar hemoglobin concentration, but a greatly diminished volume. Swelling-induced [K-Cl] cotransport was activated in the ghosts at a volume (20 fl) well below the activation volume for intact cells (70 fl), but at a similar hemoglobin concentration (30-35 g dry solids per 100 g wet weight). Ghosts made to contain 40% albumin and 60% hemoglobin showed activation of [K-Cl] cotransport at a concentration of cell solids similar to intact cells or ghosts containing only hemoglobin. [K-Cl] cotransport in the resealed ghosts became quiescent at a dry solid concentration close to that at which shrinkage-induced Na/H exchange became activated. These results support the notion that the primary volume sensor in dog red cells is cytosolic protein concentration. We speculate that macromolecular crowding is the mechanism by which cells initiate responses to volume perturbation.  相似文献   

3.
We have used a radiolabelled, benzophenone analog of bumetanide, 4-[3H]benzoyl-5-sulfamoyl-3-(3-thenyloxy)benzoic acid ([3H]BSTBA) to photolabel plasma membranes from duck red blood cells. BSTBA, like bumetanide, is a loop diuretic and a potent inhibitor of (Na + K + Cl) cotransport, and [3H]BSTBA binds to intact duck red cells with a high affinity similar to that of [3H]bumetanide (K 1/2 congruent to 0.1 microM). We incubated duck red cells with [3H]BSTBA, then lysed the cells and exposed the ghosts to ultraviolet light. The ghosting and photolysis was done at 0 degree C to prevent dissociation of the [3H]BSTBA. The ghosts were then sonicated to remove the nuclei and run on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. Analysis of H2O2-digested gel slices revealed [3H]BSTBA to be incorporated into a protein of approx. 150 kDa. This is the same molecular weight we obtain for a protein from dog kidney membranes which is photolabelled by [3H]BSTBA in a manner highly consistent with labelling of the (Na + K + Cl) cotransporter (Haas and Forbush (1987) Am. J. Physiol. 253, C243-C252). Several lines of evidence strongly suggest that the 150 kDa protein from duck red cell membranes is an integral component of the (Na + K + Cl)-cotransport system in these cells: (1) Photolabelling of this protein by [3H]BSTBA is blocked when 10 microM unlabelled bumetanide is included in the initial incubation medium with [3H]BSTBA; (2) Photoincorporation of [3H]BSTBA into the 150 kDa protein is markedly increased when the initial incubation medium is hypertonic or contains norepinephrine, conditions which similarly stimulate both (Na + K + Cl) cotransport and saturable [3H]bumetanide binding in duck red cells; (3) The photolabelling of this protein shows a saturable dependence on [3H]BSTBA concentration, with a K1/2 (0.06 microM) similar to that for the reversible, saturable binding of [3H]BSTBA and [3H]bumetanide to duck red cells; and (4) [3H]BSTBA photoincorporation into the 150 kDa protein, like saturable [3H]bumetanide binding to intact cells, requires the simultaneous presence of Na+, K+, and Cl- in the medium containing the radiolabelled diuretic.  相似文献   

4.
Volume-sensitive K-Cl cotransport occurs in red blood cells of many species. In intact cells, activation of K-Cl cotransport by swelling requires dephosphorylation of some cell protein, but maximal activity requires the presence of intracellular ATP. We have examined the relation between K-Cl cotransport activity and ATP in ghosts prepared from human red blood cells. K-Cl cotransport activity in swollen ghosts increased by ATP, and the increase requires Mg so that it almost certainly results from the phosphorylation of some membrane component. However, even in ATP-free ghosts residual volume-sensitive K-Cl cotransport can be demonstrated. This residual cotransport in ATP-free ghosts is greater in the presence of vanadate, a tyrosyl phosphatase inhibitor, and in ghosts that contain ATP cotransport is reduced by genistein, a tyrosyl kinase inhibitor. Okadaic acid, an inhibitor of serine and threonine phosphatases, inhibits K-Cl cotransport in ghosts as it does in intact cells. Experiments in which ghosts were preexposed to okadaic acid showed that the protein dephosphorylation that permits K-Cl cotransport can proceed to completion before the ghosts are swollen and K transport measured and therefore dephosphorylation is not a response to ghost swelling. In experiments with ATP-free ghosts we found that phosphorylation is not necessary to increase the cotransport rate when shrunken ghosts are swollen, nor is rephosphorylation necessary to decrease the cotransport rate when swollen ghosts are shrunken. Cotransport is greater in swollen than in shrunken ghosts even when the swollen and shrunken ghosts have the same concentration of cytoplasmic solutes. We conclude that, although phosphorylation and dephosphorylation modify the activity of the cotransporter in swollen and in shrunken ghosts, neither of these processes nor any other known messenger is involved in signal transduction between the cell volume sensor and the cotransporter as originally proposed by Jennings and Al- Rohil (Jennings, M. L., and N. Al-Rohil. 1990. Journal of General Physiology. 95: 1021-1040).  相似文献   

5.
To differentiate whether the primary volume signal in dog red cells arises from a change in cell configuration or the concentration and dilution of cell contents, we prepared resealed ghosts that had the same surface area and hemoglobin concentration as intact cells but less than 1/3 their volume. Shrinkage of both intact cells and resealed ghosts triggered Na/H exchange. Activation of this transporter in the two preparations correlated closely with cytosolic protein concentration but not at all with volume. The Na/H exchanger was more sensitive to shrinkage in albumin-loaded resealed ghosts than in intact cells or ghosts containing only hemoglobin. Similar results were obtained for the swelling-induced [K-Cl] cotransporter. We believe perception of cell volume originates with changes in cytoplasmic protein concentration. We think the kinases and phosphatases that control the activation of membrane transporters in response to cell swelling or shrinkage are regulated by the mechanism of macromolecular crowding.  相似文献   

6.
K-Cl cotransport, theelectroneutral-coupled movement of K and Cl ions, plays an importantrole in regulatory volume decrease. We recently reported that nitrite,a nitric oxide derivative possessing potent vasodilation properties,stimulates K-Cl cotransport in low-K sheep red blood cells (LK SRBCs).We hypothesized that activation of vascular smooth muscle (VSM) K-Clcotransport by vasodilators decreases VSM tension. Here we tested thishypothesis by comparing the effects of commonly used vasodilators,hydralazine (HYZ), sodium nitroprusside, isosorbide mononitrate, andpentaerythritol, on K-Cl cotransport in LK SRBCs and in primarycultures of rat VSM cells (VSMCs) and of HYZ-induced K-Clcotransport activation on relaxation of isolated porcine coronaryrings. K-Cl cotransport was measured as the Cl-dependent K efflux or Rbinflux in the presence and absence of inhibitors for other K/Rbtransport pathways. All vasodilators activated K-Cl cotransport in LKSRBCs and HYZ in VSMCs, and this activation was inhibited by calyculinand genistein, two inhibitors of K-Cl cotransport. KT-5823, a specificinhibitor of protein kinase G, abolished the sodiumnitroprusside-stimulated K-Cl cotransport in LK SRBCs, suggestinginvolvement of the cGMP pathway in K-Cl cotransport activation.Hydralazine, in a dose-dependent manner, and sodium nitroprussiderelaxed (independently of the endothelium) precontractedarteries when only K-Cl cotransport was operating and other pathwaysfor K/Rb transport, including the Ca-activated K channel, wereinhibited. Our findings suggest that K-Cl cotransport may be involvedin vasodilation.

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7.
Bumetanide is a potent inhibitor of cation-chloride co-transport systems in many cell types, including duck red cells. We studied equilibrium binding of [3H]bumetanide to intact duck red cells under a number of conditions known to affect (Na + K + 2Cl) co-transport in these cells. Saturable [3H]bumetanide binding to duck red cells is markedly stimulated by addition of norepinephrine or cell shrinkage, conditions which similarly stimulate co-transport. In the presence of norepinephrine and saturating concentrations of extracellular sodium, potassium, and chloride for the co-transporter, we found approximately 1000 [3H]bumetanide-binding sites/red cell, and measurement of 24Na+ influx on the same cells yielded a turnover number of approximately 4000/s for the co-transporter. 24Na+ influx was negatively correlated with the amount of bound [3H]bumetanide, and both saturable binding and inhibition of influx were half-maximal at approximately 10(-7) M [3H]bumetanide. Binding of [3H]bumetanide to duck red cells is stimulated in a saturable manner by increasing extracellular sodium and potassium. Chloride has a biphasic effect on [3H]bumetanide binding; increasing [Cl-]o (by replacement of methylsulfate) from 0 to 32 mM markedly enhances binding, whereas further increasing [Cl-]o to 160 mM inhibits binding. This behavior is similar to that reported for bumetanide inhibition of duck red cell (Na + K + 2Cl) co-transport (Haas, M., and McManus, T. J. (1983) Am. J. Physiol. 245, C235-C240; Haas, M., and McManus, T. J. (1982) Biophys. J. 37, 214a) and [3H]bumetanide binding to membranes from dog kidney outer medulla (Forbush, B. III, and Palfrey, H. C. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 11787-11792).  相似文献   

8.
K-Cl cotransport plays a crucial role in regulatory volume decrease of erythrocytes. K-Cl cotransport activities in dog erythrocytes with an inherited high Na-K pump activity (HK) and normal erythrocytes (LK) were compared. Nitrite (NO(2)) stimulated K-Cl cotransport activity in HK cells around 14-fold at 2.4 mM, and it also increased the Km value of this cotransporter. Real-time PCR and western blot analysis revealed that K-Cl cotransporter 1 was dominant, and that the quantity of K-Cl cotransporter 1 protein was comparable between HK and LK erythrocytes. These results suggest that the difference in cotransport activity was not caused by the amount of K-Cl cotransport protein but by a difference in the regulation system, which is susceptible to oxidant.  相似文献   

9.
The Na/K/2Cl cotransport system in the avian erythrocyte can be activated by agents that raise intracellular cAMP suggesting the involvement of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAMP-PK) in its regulation. Another group of stimuli including fluoride and hypertonicity stimulate cotransport via cAMP-independent means. To further investigate the role of phosphorylation in these processes, we examined the effects of protein kinase inhibitors of 8 (p-Cl-phenylthio)-cAMP (cpt-cAMP), fluoride and hypertonic activation of cotransport in duck red cells, and [3H]bumetanide binding to isolated membranes. Preincubation of cells with the kinase inhibitors K-252a (Ki approximately 1.6 microM) and H-9 (Ki approximately 100 microM) blocked cpt-cAMP activation of bumetanide-sensitive 86Rb influx and bumetanide binding. These inhibitors also led to a rapid deactivation of cotransport and decrease in bumetanide binding when added to cells maximally stimulated by cpt-cAMP. K-252a and H-9 inhibited cotransport activation by cAMP-independent stimuli, but 10-fold higher concentrations were required, implying the involvement of a cAMP-independent phosphorylation process in the mechanism of action of these agents. Removal of stimuli that elevate cAMP leads to a rapid reversal of cotransport indicating the presence of active protein phosphatases in these cells. The protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid (OA, EC50: 630 nM) stimulated both Na/K/2Cl cotransport and bumetanide binding to membranes. As with fluoride and hypertonic stimulation, the OA effect was inhibited only at relatively high concentrations of K-252a. Phosphorylation of the membrane skeletal protein goblin (Mr 230,000) at specific cAMP-dependent sites was used as an in situ marker for the state of activation of cAMP-PK. Goblin phosphorylation at these sites was increased by norepinephrine and cpt-cAMP and rapidly reversed by K-252a and H-9, confirming that both inhibitors do block cAMP-PK activity. While OA markedly increased overall phosphorylation of many erythrocyte membrane proteins, including goblin, it did not affect goblin phosphorylation at specific cAMP-dependent sites. These results implicate a cAMP-independent protein kinase in the mediation of the OA effect on cotransport and bumetanide binding. The bumetanide-binding component of the avian erythrocyte cotransporter, an Mr approximately 150,000 protein that can be photolabeled with the bumetanide analog [3H]4-benzoyl-5-sulfamoyl-3-(3-thenyloxy)-benzoic acid was found to be a phosphoprotein. These results strongly support the hypothesis that phosphorylation and dephosphorylation, possibly of the Na/K/2Cl cotransporter itself, regulates the activity of  相似文献   

10.
K-Cl cotransport is activated by vasodilators in erythrocytes and vascular smooth muscle cells and its regulation involves putative kinase/phosphatase cascades. N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) activates the system presumably by inhibiting a protein kinase. Nitrovasodilators relax smooth muscle via cGMP-dependent activation of protein kinase G (PKG), a regulator of membrane channels and transporters. We investigated whether PKG regulates K-Cl cotransport activity or mRNA expression in normal, PKG-deficient-vector-only-transfected (PKG-) and PKG-catalytic-domain-transfected (PKG+) rat aortic smooth muscle cells. K-Cl cotransport was calculated as the Cl-dependent Rb influx, and mRNA was determined by semiquantitative RT-PCR. Baseline K-Cl cotransport was higher in PKG+ than in PKG- cells (p <0.01). At 0.5 mM, NEM stimulated K-Cl cotransport by 5-fold in PKG- but not in PKG+ cells. However, NEM was more potent although less effective to activate K-Cl cotransport in normal (passage 1-3) and PKG+ than in PKG- cells. In PKG- cells, [(dihydroindenyl) oxy] alkanoic acid (300 mM) but not furosemide (1 mM) inhibited K-Cl cotransport. Furthermore, no difference in K-Cl cotransport mRNA expression was observed between these cells. In conclusion, this study shows that manipulation of PKG expression in vascular smooth muscle cells affects K-Cl cotransport activity and its activation by NEM.  相似文献   

11.
ATP-dependent activation and deactivation of retinal rod outer segment phosphodiesterase is affected by calcium [Kawamura, S. and Bownds, M. D., J. Gen. Physiol. 77:571-591(1981)]. Our data demonstrate that although calmodulin has been found in rod outer segments [Liu, Y. P. and Schwartz, H., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 526:186-193(1978); Kohnken, R. E. et al, J. Biol. Chem. 256:12517-12522(1981)], this protein is not involved in calcium-dependent phosphodiesterase activation at light levels at which calcium clearly affects this enzyme's activity. Furthermore, calmodulin does not mediate the calcium-dependent deactivation of phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

12.
The involvement of protein kinase C in the regulation of Na+/K+/Cl- cotransport was investigated in cultured HT29 human colonic adenocarcinoma cells. We have demonstrated previously the presence of a Na+/K+/Cl- cotransport pathway in HT29 cells (Kim, H.D., Tsai, Y-S., Franklin, C.C., and Turner, J.T. (1989) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 946, 397-404). Treatment of cells with the phorbol esters phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu) caused an increase in membrane-associated protein kinase C activity that was accompanied by a concomitant decrease in cytosolic protein kinase C activity. PMA also produced a rapid transient increase in cotransport to 137% of control values by 5 min followed by a progressive decrease to 19% of control values by 2 h. To determine the underlying mechanism for the reduction in Na+/K+/Cl- cotransport, changes in cotransporter number and/or affinity were determined in radioligand binding studies using [3H]bumetanide. PMA and PDBu produced essentially identical time- and dose-dependent decreases in specific [3H]bumetanide binding that were similar to the observed decreases in cotransport. Analysis of saturation and competition binding data indicated that the decrease in binding was due to a lowered Bmax with no change in affinity. Both the decrease in binding and the changes in cotransport elicited by PMA were prevented by the protein kinase inhibitor H7. These findings suggest that phorbol esters cause a decrease in the number of cotransporters in HT29 cells, resulting in a reduction in Na+/K+/Cl- cotransport activity.  相似文献   

13.
The thiol oxidant diazene dicarboxylic acid bis [N,N-dimethylamide] (diamide) is known to reversibly activate K-Cl cotransport in sheep red blood cells [1]. Although the detailed mechanism of activation is unknown, functional thiols at the membrane or at the cytoplasmic level are recognized as important. To search for membrane bound thiols involved in the regulation of K-Cl cotransport, sheep red cells were first exposed to diamide at concentrations activating K-Cl cotransport, and then to the alkylating agent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) in order to block non-oxidized thiols. White ghosts, prepared by osmotic lysis from these cells, were again treated with NEM followed by reduction of the diamide-induced dithiols with dithio-threitol (DTT) concentrations known to reverse the diamide-induced K-Cl flux [1]. Maximum 3H-NEM incorporation into the DTT-reduced thiols occurred at 50 M DTT. Saturation labelling by 3H-NEM of about 2 × 104 diamide-protected thiols/cell occurred at 25 M NEM. Diamide protected about 0.1% of all membrane thiols chemically determined earlier [2]. Membranes from high K (HK) and low K (LK) sheep red cells did not differ significantly in the number of diamide-protected thiols, and polyacrylamide gels revealed a similar protein distribution of 3H-NEM-labelled thiols. Since diamide is known to stimulate K-Cl flux in LK cells ten times more than in HK cells this finding is consistent with the hypothesis of a cytoplasmic control effecting different K-Cl flux activities in the membranes of the two cation genotypic red blood cells.  相似文献   

14.
Böhmer C  Wehner F 《FEBS letters》2001,494(1-2):125-128
The epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) is composed of the subunits alpha, beta, and gamma [Canessa et al., Nature 367 (1994) 463-467] and typically exhibits a high affinity to amiloride [Canessa et al., Nature 361 (1993) 467-470]. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, conflicting results were reported concerning the osmo-sensitivity of the channel [Ji et al., Am. J. Physiol. 275 (1998) C1182-C1190; Hawayda and Subramanyam, J. Gen. Physiol. 112 (1998) 97-111; Rossier, J. Gen. Physiol. 112 (1998) 95-96]. Rat hepatocytes were the first system in which amiloride-sensitive sodium currents in response to hypertonic stress were reported [Wehner et al., J. Gen. Physiol. 105 (1995) 507-535; Wehner et al., Physiologist 40 (1997) A-4]. Moreover, all three ENaC subunits are expressed in these cells [B?hmer et al., Cell. Physiol. Biochem. 10 (2000) 187-194]. Here, we injected specific antisense oligonucleotides directed against alpha-rENaC into single rat hepatocytes in confluent primary culture and found an inhibition of hypertonicity-induced Na(+) currents by 70%. This is the first direct evidence for a role of the ENaC in cell volume regulation.  相似文献   

15.
The reflection coefficient, sigma, for several small permeant nonelectrolytes was determined for dog and beef red blood cell membranes. Our sigma values were considerably higher than those previously reported for dog cells; e.g., out sigma urea was 87% higher than the sigma urea of Rich, Sha'afi, Barton and Solomon (J. Gen. Physiol. 50: 2391, 1967). Our sigma values for urea were only slightly greater in beef cells than previously reported by Farmer and Macey (Biochim. Biophys. Acta 290: 290, 1972). We found that a trend exists when (1 - sigma) is plotted against the log of the permeability coefficient, omega. This observation is also consistent with our previously reported sigma data for human red cell membranes (Owen & Eyring, J. Gen. Physiol. 66: 241, 1972). This trend suggests that small hydrophilic molecules interact highly with cell membrane water. The exceptions to this trend were lipophilic molecules, indicating they do not interact with water while penetrating the red cell membrane.  相似文献   

16.
Two receptor sites for [3H]piretanide, a sulfamoylbenzoic acid loop diuretic, have been identified in intact Madin-Darby canine kidney cells, an epithelial cell line derived from dog kidney. The two receptor sites differed in their affinity for piretanide (KD1 = 2.1 +/- 1.4 nM and KD2 = 264 +/- 88 nM) and the maximal number of sites (Bmax1 = 11 +/- 4 and Bmax2 = 120 +/- 80 fmol/mg of protein). Madin-Darby canine kidney cells are known to possess a tightly coupled and highly cooperative Na+,K+,Cl- cotransporter which is sensitive to loop diuretics. Under ionic conditions identical to those used to study piretanide binding (30 mM Na+, 30 mM K+, 30 mM Cl-), the Ki for inhibition of the initial rate of 86Rb+ uptake by piretanide was 333 +/- 92 nM, a value not significantly different from the KD of the low affinity receptor site. [3H]Piretanide binding to three low K+-resistant mutants derived from this cell line was also studied. These mutants had been previously characterized as being partially or completely defective in Na+,K+,Cl- cotransport activity (McRoberts, J. A., Tran, C. T., and Saier, M. H., Jr. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 12320-12326). One of these mutants had undetectable levels of Na+,K+,Cl- cotransport activity and low to undetectable levels of specific piretanide binding. The second mutant had low but measurable levels of cotransport activity (11% of the wild-type levels) and displayed very low affinity (KD approximately 8000 nM) specific piretanide binding. In the third mutant, expression of Na+,K+,Cl- cotransport activity and both piretanide receptors was cell density-dependent. Subconfluent to just-confluent cultures of this mutant lacked detectable cotransport activity as well as specific piretanide binding, whereas very dense cultures displayed both piretanide receptors and had intermediate to nearly normal levels of cotransport activity. These results demonstrate that the Na+,K+,Cl- cotransporter is a receptor for loop diuretics, but they also raise questions about the functional significance of the two piretanide receptor sites.  相似文献   

17.
Activation of K-Cl cotransport is associated with activation ofmembrane-bound serine/threonine protein phosphatases (S/T-PPases). Wecharacterize red blood cell S/T-PPases and K-Clcotransport activity regarding protein phosphatase inhibitors andresponse to changes in ionic strength and cell size. Proteinphosphatase type 1 (PP1) activity is highly sensitive to calyculin A(CalA) but not to okadaic acid (OA). PP2A activity is highly sensitive to CalA and OA. CalA completely inhibits K-Cl cotransport activity, whereas OA partially inhibits K-Cl cotransport. Membrane PP1 and membrane PP2A activities are elevated in cells suspended in hypotonic solutions, where K-Cl cotransport is elevated. Increases in membrane PP1 activity (62 ± 10% per 100 meq/l) result from decreases in intracellular ionic strength and correlate with increases in K-Cl cotransport activity (54 ± 10% per 100 meq/l). Increasesin membrane PP2A activity (270 ± 77% per 100 mosM) result fromvolume increases and also correlate with increases in K-Cl cotransportactivity (420 ± 47% per 100 mosM). The characteristics ofmembrane-associated PP1 and PP2A are consistent with a role for bothphosphatases in K-Cl cotransport activation in human erythrocytes.

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18.
Thiol reagents activateK-Cl cotransport (K-Cl COT), the Cl-dependent and Na-independentouabain-resistant K flux, in red blood cells (RBCs) of several species,upon depletion of cellular glutathione (GSH). K-Cl COT isphysiologically active in high potassium (HK), high GSH (HG) dog RBCs.In this unique model, we studied whether the same inverse relationshipexists between GSH levels and K-Cl COT activity found in other species.The effects of GSH depletion by three different chemical reactions[nitrite (NO2)-mediated oxidation, diazene dicarboxylicacid bis-N,N-dimethylamide (diamide)-induceddithiol formation, and glutathione S-transferase (GST)-catalyzed conjugation of GSH with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB)] were tested on K-Cl COT and regulatory volume decrease (RVD).After 85% GSH depletion, all three interventions stimulated K-Cl COThalf-maximally with the following order of potency: diamide > NO2 > CDNB. Repletion of GSH reversed K-Cl COTstimulation by 50%. Cl-dependent RVD accompanied K-Cl COT activationby NO2 and diamide. K-Cl COT activation at concentrationratios of oxidant/GSH greater than unity was irreversible, suggestingeither nitrosothiolation, heterodithiol formation, or GST-mediateddinitrophenylation of protein thiols. The data support the hypothesisthat an intact redox system, rather than the absolute GSH levels,protects K-Cl COT activity and cell volume regulation from thiol modification.

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19.
Na+, K+, and Cl- transport in resting pancreatic acinar cells   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
To understand the role of Na+, K+, and Cl- transporters in fluid and electrolyte secretion by pancreatic acinar cells, we studied the relationship between them in resting and stimulated cells. Measurements of [Cl-]i in resting cells showed that in HCO3(-)-buffered medium [Cl- ]i and Cl- fluxes are dominated by the Cl-/HCO3- exchanger. In the absence of HCO3-, [Cl-]i is regulated by NaCl and NaK2Cl cotransport systems. Measurements of [Na+]i showed that the Na(+)-coupled Cl- transporters contributed to the regulation of [Na+]i, but the major Na+ influx pathway in resting pancreatic acinar cells is the Na+/H+ exchanger. 86Rb influx measurements revealed that > 95% of K+ influx is mediated by the Na+ pump and the NaK2Cl cotransporter. In resting cells, the two transporters appear to be coupled through [K+]i in that inhibition of either transporter had small effect on 86Rb uptake, but inhibition of both transporters largely prevented 86Rb uptake. Another form of coupling occurs between the Na+ influx transporters and the Na+ pump. Thus, inhibition of NaK2Cl cotransport increased Na+ influx by the Na+/H+ exchanger to fuel the Na+ pump. Similarly, inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange increased the activity of the NaK2Cl cotransporter. The combined measurements of [Na+]i and 86Rb influx indicate that the Na+/H+ exchanger contributes twice more than the NaK2Cl cotransporter and three times more than the NaCl cotransporter and a tetraethylammonium-sensitive channel to Na+ influx in resting cells. These findings were used to develop a model for the relationship between the transporters in resting pancreatic acinar cells.  相似文献   

20.
This study examines the effect of heat-induced cytoskeleton transitions and phosphoprotein phosphatase inhibitors on the activity of shrinkage-induced Na+, K+, 2Cl- cotransport and Na+/H+ exchange in rat erythrocytes and swelling-induced K+, Cl- cotransport in human and rat blood cells. Preincubation of human and rat erythrocytes at 49 degrees C drastically activated K+, Cl- cotransport and completely (rat) or partly (human) abolished its volume-dependent regulation. The same procedure did not affect basal activity of Na+, K+, 2Cl- cotransport but completely abolished its activation by shrinkage thus suggesting the involvement of a thermosensitive element of cytoskeleton network in the volume-dependent regulation of cotransporters. Both the shrinkage- and electrochemical proton gradient-induced Na+/H+ exchange was inhibited by the heat treatment to the same extent (50-70%), thus indicating the different signaling pathways involved in the activation of Na+, K+, 2Cl- cotransport and Na+/H+ exchange by cell shrinkage. This suggestion is in accordance with data on the different kinetics of volume-dependent activation and inactivation of these carriers as well as on their sensitivity to medium osmolality. Both swelling- and heat-induced increments of K+, Cl- cotransport activity were diminished by inhibitors of phosphoprotein phosphatases (okadaic acid and calyculin). In rat erythrocytes these compounds potentiate shrinkage-induced Na+/H+ exchange. On the contrary, neither basal nor shrinkage-induced Na+, K+, 2Cl- cotransport was affected by these compounds. Our results indicate a key role of cytoskeleton network in volume-dependent activation of K+, Cl- and Na+, K+, 2Cl- cotransport and the involvement of protein phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle in regulation of the activity of K+, Cl- cotransport and Na+/H+ exchange.  相似文献   

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