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1.
By means of micro-dissection and injection Amœba proteus was treated with the chlorides of Na, K, Ca, and Mg alone, in combination, and with variations of pH. I. The Plasmalemma. 1. NaCl weakens and disrupts the surface membrane of the ameba. Tearing the membrane accelerates the disruption which spreads rapidly from the site of the tear. KCl has no disruptive effect on the membrane but renders it adhesive. 2. MgCl2 and CaCl2 have no appreciable effect on the integrity of the surface membrane of the ameba when applied on the outside. No spread of disruption occurs when the membrane is torn in these salts. When these salts are introduced into the ameba they render the pellicle of the involved region rigid. II. The Internal Protoplasm. 3. Injected water either diffuses through the protoplasm or becomes localized in a hyaline blister. Large amounts when rapidly injected produce a "rushing effect". 4. HCl at pH 1.8 solidifies the internal protoplasm and at pH 2.2 causes solidification only after several successive injections. The effect of the subsequent injections may be due to the neutralization of the cell-buffers by the first injection. 5. NaCl and KCl increase the fluidity of the internal protoplasm and induce quiescence. 6. CaCl2 and MgCl2 to a lesser extent solidify the internal protoplasm. With CaCl2 the solidification tends to be localized. With MgCl2 it tends to spread. The injection of CaCl2 accelerates movement in the regions not solidified whereas the injection of MgCl2 induces quiescence. III. Pinching-Off Reaction. 7. A hyaline blister produced by the injection of water may be pinched off. The pinched-off blister is a liquid sphere surrounded by a pellicle. 8. Pinching off always takes place with injections of HCl when the injected region is solidified. 9. The injection of CaCl2 usually results in the pinching off of the portion solidified. The rate of pinching off varies with the concentration of the salt. The injection of MgCl2 does not cause pinching off. IV. Reparability of Torn Surfaces. 10. The repair of a torn surface takes place readily in distilled water. In the different salt solutions, reparability varies specifically with each salt, with the concentration of the salt, and with the extent of the tear. In NaCl and in KCl repair occurs less readily than in water. In MgCl2 repair takes place with great difficulty. In CaCl2 a proper estimate of the process of repair is complicated by the pinching-off phenomenon. However, CaCl2 is the only salt found to increase the mobility of the plasmalemma, and this presumably enhances its reparability. 11. The repair of the surface is probably a function of the internal protoplasm and depends upon an interaction of the protoplasm with the surrounding medium. V. Permeability. 12. NaCl and KCl readily penetrate the ameba from the exterior. CaCl2 and MgCl2 do not. 13. All four salts when injected into an ameba readily diffuse through the internal protoplasm. In the case of CaCl2 the diffusion may be arrested by the pinching-off process. VI. Toxicity. 14. NaCl and KCl are more toxic to the exterior of the cell than to the interior, and the reverse is true for CaCl2 and MgCl2. 15. The relative non-toxicity of injected NaCl to the interior of the ameba is not necessarily due to its diffusion outward from the cell. 16. HCl is much more toxic to the exterior of a cell than to the interior; at pH 5.5 it is toxic to the surface whereas at pH 2.5 it is not toxic to the interior. NaOH to pH 9.8 is not toxic either to the surface or to the interior. VII. Antagonism. 17. The toxic effects of NaCl and of KCl on the exterior of the cell can be antagonized by CaCl2 and this antagonism occurs at the surface. Although the lethal effect of NaCl is thus antagonized, NaCl still penetrates but at a slower rate than if the ameba were immersed in a solution of this salt alone. 18. NaCl and HCl are mutually antagonistic in the interior of the ameba. No antagonism between the salts and HCl was found on the exterior of the ameba. No antagonism between the salts and NaOH was found on the interior or exterior of the ameba. 19. The pinching-off phenomenon can be antagonized by NaCl or by KCl, and the rate of the retardation of the pinching-off process varies with the concentration of the antagonizing salt. 20. The prevention of repair of a torn membrane by toxic solutions of NaCl or KCl can be antagonized by CaCl2. These experiments show directly the marked difference between the interior and the exterior of the cell in their behavior toward the chlorides of Na, K, Ca, and Mg.  相似文献   

2.
The pH of a 0.01 molar solution of glycine, half neutralized with NaOH, is 9.685. Addition of only one of the salts NaCl, KCl, MgCl2, or CaCl2 will lower the pH of the solution (at least up to 1 µ). If a given amount of KCl is added to a glycine solution, the subsequent addition of increasing amounts of NaCl will first raise the pH (up to 0.007 M NaCl). Further addition of NaCl (up to 0.035 M NaCl) will lower the pH, and further additions slightly raise the pH. The same type of curve is obtained by adding NaCl to glycine solution containing MgCl2 or CaCl2 except that the first and second breaks occur at 0.015 M and 0.085 M NaCl, respectively. Addition of CaCl2 to a glycine solution containing MgCl2 gives the same phenomena with breaks at 0.005 M and 0.025 M CaCl; or at ionic strengths of 0.015 µCaCl2 and 0.075 µCaCl2. This indicates that the effect is a function of the ionic strength of the added salt. These effects are sharp and unmistakable. They are almost identical with the effects produced by the same salt mixtures on the pH of gelatin solutions. They are very suggestive of physiological antagonisms, and at the same time cannot be attributed to colloidal phenomena.  相似文献   

3.
I. The Plasmalemma. 1. On the plasmalemma of amebæ CaCl2 antagonizes the toxic action of LiCl better than it does NaCl, and still better than it does KCl. MgCl2 antagonizes the toxic action of NaCl better than it does LiCl and still better than it does KCl. 2. CaCl2 antagonizes the toxic action of LiCl and of KCl better than does MgCl2: MgCl2 antagonizes NaCl better than does CaCl2. II. The Internal Protoplasm. 3. The antagonizing efficiency of CaCl2 and of MgCl2 are highest against the toxic action of KCl on the internal protoplasm, less against that of NaCl, and least against that of LiCl. 4. CaCl2 antagonizes the toxic action of LiCl better than does MgCl2: MgCl2 antagonizes the toxic action of NaCl and of KCl better than does CaCl2. 5. LiCl antagonizes the toxic action of MgCl2 on the internal protoplasm more effectively than do NaCl or KCl, which have an equal antagonizing effect on the MgCl2 action. III. The Nature of Antagonism. 6. When the concentration of an antagonizing salt is increased to a toxic value, it acts synergistically with a toxic salt. 7. No case was found in which a potentially antagonistic salt abolishes the toxic action of a salt unless it is present at the site (surface or interior) of toxic action. 8. Antagonistic actions of the salts used in these experiments are of differing effectiveness on the internal protoplasm and on the surface membrane.  相似文献   

4.
The permeability of a psychrophilic Acbromobacter strain to the chlorides of Na, K, Mg and Ca was investigated with light-scattering technique. Comparisons, were made with cells of Escherichia coli B. Cells of both strains suspended in “water were plasmolyzed by 0.1 or 0.2 M solutions of MgCl2 or CaCl2 without subsequent deplasmolysis. NaCl or KCl also plasmolyzed the cells, but deplasmolysis followed.” When suspended in growth medium E. coli became completely de-plasmolyzed., whereas the psychrophile still excluded MgCl2 and CaCl2 to a great extent. The plasmolysis and deplasmolysis were reversible. Electron micrographs of the psychrophile exposed to CaCl2 confirmed the presence of plasrnolysis.  相似文献   

5.
1. Strychnine sulfate 0.000069 M decreased percentage attachment to the substratum by Amoeba proteus in 0.0029 M NaCl from 77.3 to 1.3, in 0.0029 M KCl from 40.8 to 2.5, in 0.002 M CaCl2 from 73.3 to 68.0, in 0.002 M MgCl2 from 85.5 to 83.3. 2. Frequency of ingestion of chilomonads by Amoeba proteus is increased by adding strychnine sulfate to solutions of NaCl, KCl, or CaCl2. Frequency of ingestion is increased in NaCl solution from 1.3 to 2.3, in KCl from 0.75 to 2.25, and in CaCl2 from 1.1 to 1.9 chilomonads per minute. Ingestion is not significantly increased by the addition of strychnine to MgCl2 solution. 3. Frequency of ingestion of food by Amoeba proteus is not closely correlated with attachment to the substratum in NaCl and KCl solutions to which strychnine sulfate is added. 4. Chilomonads adhere to the plasmalemma of Amoeba proteus in solutions of NaCl, KCl, or CaCl2 containing strychnine, but in MgCl2 plus strychnine only a few adhere to it. Strychnine appears to make the surface of the amebae and chilomonads sticky in the former but not in the latter. Frequency of ingestion is apparently correlated with adherence of chilomonads to the plasmalemma. 5. Attachment to the substratum and ingestion by Pelomyxa carolinensis is increased by dead Chilomonas, Colpidium, and Paramecium in aqueous solutions, by materials obtained from paramecia by alcoholic-ether extraction, and by solutions in which these organisms have lived. 6. Attachment to the substratum by Pelomyxa carolinensis is not closely correlated with kind or concentration of inorganic salts used in this study. 7. Materials were found in extracts of paramecia which had certain characteristics in common with choline esters. There is no reason to doubt that under certain conditions materials are present in aqueous and alcoholic extracts which are pharmacologically similar to choline and acetylcholine. 8. Aqueous suspensions of paramecia when subcutaneously injected into young mice for 21 days inhibit the gonadotropic luteinizing hormone of the pituitary. Ovaries from injected mice showed no corpora lutea, and the seminal vesicles from injected males were smaller and contained less fluid than those of the controls.  相似文献   

6.
1. The question of the critical pore diameter for streaming potential is discussed. 2. The surface charge is calculated for cellulose in contact with solutions of K3PO4, K2CO3, K2SO4, KCl, and ThCl4. 3. The surface charge of cellulose in contact with a solution of 2 x 10–4 N NaCl is calculated as a function of temperature and is found to show a sharp break at 39°. This is interpreted in terms of the change of the specific heat of water. 4. A marked ion antagonism is found in NaCl:KCl, KCl:MgCl2, NaCl:MgCl2, NaCl:CaCl2, KCl:CaCl2, CaCl2:MgCl2 mixtures when the surface charge is calculated as a function of concentration.  相似文献   

7.
The cells of Halicystis impaled on capillaries reach a steady P.D. of 60 to 80 millivolts across the protoplasm from sap to sea water. The outer surface of the protoplasm is positive in the electrometer to the inner surface. The P.D. is reduced by contact with sap and balanced NaCl-CaCl2 mixtures; it is abolished completely in solutions of NaCl, CaCl2, KCl, MgSO4, and MgCl2. There is prompt recovery of P.D. in sea water after these exposures.  相似文献   

8.
In Nitella the substitution of KCl for NaCl changes the P.D. in a negative direction. In some cases this change is lessened by adding solid CaCl2 to the solution of KCl. This may be due to lessening the partition coefficient of KCl or to decreasing the solubility of an organic substance which sensitizes the cell to the action of KCl. Little or no correlation exists between this effect of calcium and its ordinary antagonistic action in producing a balanced solution which preserves the life of the cell indefinitely. CaCl2 is negative to NaCl but positive to KCl. The effects of mixtures of KCl, NaCl, and CaCl2 are discussed. The concentration effect of a mixture of KCl + CaCl2 shows certain peculiarities due to action currents: these resemble those found with pure KCl. These studies and others on Nitella, Valonia, and Halicystis indicate that mobilities and partition coefficients are variable and can be brought under experimental control.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of sea salts, NaCl, KCl, MgCl2, MgSO4, and CaCl2, on the growth of protoplast cultures of two mangrove species, Sonneratia alba and Avicennia alba, were investigated using 96-well culture plates. Plants of these two species naturally grow at the seaward side of a mangrove forest. Cotyledon protoplasts of S. alba showed halophilic nature to NaCl, KCl, and MgCl2 at low concentrations (10–50 mM) when cultured in Murashige and Skoog’s (MS) medium containing 0.6 M mannitol. CaCl2 at a concentration higher than 25 mM was inhibitory to cell growth. On the other hand, in protoplast culture of A. alba suspension cells, which were induced from cotyledon tissues, in the modified amino acid (mAA) medium containing 1.2 M sorbitol, tolerance to NaCl, MgCl2 and MgSO4 were observed at a wide range of concentrations up to 400 mM. CaCl2 was always inhibitory for cell divisions in A. alba, but stimulatory for spherical enlargement of cells. However, no difference in cell enlargement was observed among other salts. Similarity and difference in reactivity to salts between protoplasts and suspension cells from our previous studies were discussed in relation to the site of salt tolerance or halophilic adaptation within mangrove cells. For protoplast cultures, the site(s) for response of S. alba and A. alba are located in the cytoplasm and/or the cell membrane.  相似文献   

10.
《Phytochemistry》1987,26(6):1657-1659
A new and inexpensive inorganic medium (‘DS medium’) for the mass cultivation of freshwater blue-green algae (Cyanobacteria) and green algae has been developed. It consists basically of distilled or demineralized water (90%) and seawater (10%) and requires only little addition of pure purchasable chemicals (phosphate, trace elements, if necessary nitrate). No addition of macronutrients (NaCl, MgCl2 or MgSO4, KCl or K2SO4, CaCl2) and of boron is required because they are sufficiently provided by the seawater. Decalcified water may also be suitable instead of demineralized water. For the cultivation of green algae, a higher trace element concentration is recommended than for blue-green algae. Because of its low total salt concentration the DS medium is freshwater-like. It is easy to prepare and effects rapid algal growth. It may be of special value for algal mass culture in regions which are close to the sea.  相似文献   

11.
The cell sap of the internode ofNitella flexilis was replaced with the isotonic artificial pond water of high Ca2+-concentration (0.1 mM KCl, 0.1 mM NaCl, 10 mM CaCl2 and 275 mM mannitol) and changes in osmotic value and concentrations of K+, Na+ and Cl of the cells were followed. When the operated cells were incubated in the artificial pond water containing 0.1 mM each of KCl, NaCl, CaCl2, they survived for only a short period of time (<10 hr). The cells did not absorb ions from the artificial pond water and showed a conspicuous decrease in the rate of cytoplasmic streaming. In such cell the concentration of K+ in the protoplasm decreased significantly. In order to reverse normal concentration gradients of K+ and Na+ across the protoplasmic layer, the cells of low vacuolar ionic concentrations were incubated in the artificial cell sap (90 mM KCl, 40 mM NaCl, 15 mM CaCl2, 10 mM MgCl2). It was found that the cells rapidly absorbed much K+, Na+ and Cl and survived for a longer period (1–2 days). During this period the rate of cytoplasmic streaming was nearly normal. Furthermore, the cell lost much mannitol, indicating an enormous increase in permeability to it. Since both absorption of ions and leakage of mannitol at 1 C occurred at nearly the same rates as at 22 C, the processes are assumed to be passive.  相似文献   

12.
1. The ions of Ca and K condition general luminescence, and are therefore necessary to the conduction of the impulse. 2. In van''t Hoff''s solution from which Mg is omitted, Berœ shows hyperirritability with respect to luminescence. This is the result of the action of Ca and K ions unantagonized by Mg. 3. The luminescent material spread on filter paper does not show luminescence in sea water, NaCl, MgCl2, or saccharose solutions isotonic with sea water. In solutions of CaCl2, SrCl2, BaCl2, KCl, and K2SO4 the indicator paper glows with a bright luminescence. 4. In dark adapted Berœ, luminescence is inhibited by a certain quantity of light. This quantity has an average value of 57,285 meter-candle-minutes, which is twelve times the value given by Mnemiopsis.  相似文献   

13.
1.25 per cent gelatin solutions containing enough NaOH to bring them to pH 7.367 (or KOH to pH 7.203) were made up with various concentrations of NaCl, KCl and MgCl2, alone and in mixtures, up to molar ionic strength. The effects of these salts on the pH were observed. MgCl2 and NaCl alone lower the pH of the Na gelatinate or the K gelatinate, in all amounts of these salts. KCl first lowers the pH (up to 0.01 M K+), then raises the pH. Mixtures of NaCl and KCl (up to 0.09 M of the salt whose concentration is varied) raise the pH; then (up to 0.125 M Na+ or K+) lower the pH; and finally (above 0.125 M) behave like KCl alone. Mixtures of MgCl2 and NaCl raise the pH up to 0.10 M Na+, and lower it up to 0.15 M Na+ regardless of the amount of MgCl 2. Higher concentrations of NaCl have little effect, but the pH in this range of NaCl concentration is lowered with increase of MgCl2. Mixtures of MgCl2 and KCl behave as above described (for MgCl2 and NaCl) and the addition of NaCl plus KCl to gelatin containing MgCl2 produces essentially the same effect as the addition of either alone, except that the first two breaks in this curve come at 0.07 M and 0.08 M [Na+ + K+] and there is a third break at 0.12 M. In this pH range the free groups of the dicarboxylic acids and of lysine are essentially all ionized and the prearginine and histidine groups are essentially all non-ionized. The arginine group is about 84 per cent ionized. Hence we are studying a solution with two ionic species in equilibrium, one with the arginine group ionized, and one with it non-ionized. It is shown that the effect of each salt alone depends upon the effect of the cation on the activity of these two species due to combination. The anomalous effects of cation mixtures may be qualitatively accounted for if one or both of these species fail to combine with the cations in a mixture in proportion to the relative combination in solutions of each cation alone. Special precautions were taken to ensure accuracy in the pH measurements. The mother solutions gave identical readings to 0.001 pH and the readings with salts were discarded when not reproducible to 0.003 pH. All doubtful data were discarded.  相似文献   

14.
1. The equations which serve to predict the injury of tissue in 0.52 M NaCl and in 0.278 M CaCl2 and its subsequent recovery (when it is replaced in sea water) also enable us to predict the behavior of tissue in mixtures of these solutions, as well as its recovery in sea water after exposure to mixtures. 2. The reactions which are assumed in order to account for the behavior of the tissue proceed as if they were inhibited by a salt compound formed by the union of NaCl and CaCl2 with some constituent of the protoplasm (certain of these reactions are accelerated by CaCl2). 3. In this and preceding papers a quantitative theory is developed in order to explain: (a) the toxicity of NaCl and CaCl2; (b) the antagonism between these substances; (c) the fact that recovery (in sea water) may be partial or complete, depending on the length of exposure to the toxic solution.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The penetration of the dye, dahlia, into the sap ofNitella has been determined in the presence of NaCl, KCl, MgCl2 and CaCl2 at various concentrations.NaCl is the least effective and MgCl2 was the most effective in preventing penetration of the dye.It was found that NaCl antagonizes the action of CaCl2 in certain proportions to a small degree but not sufficiently to permit the dye to penetrate at a normal rate.Published by permission of the Surgeon General.  相似文献   

16.
Petunia (Petunia hybrida Vilm. cv. ‘Snowstorm') plants were grown in saline solution (NaCl, MgCl2, and/or CaCl2) of 0, 1, 2, and 3 bars osmotic pressures. Pollen viability was tested by tetrazolium chloride staining and by germination (by the hanging drop method, using 15 % sucrose and 0.01 % boric acid as the nutrient medium, at 27 ± 1 C). Pollen viability decreased with increased salinity. Pollen from plants grown in single salt solutions of NaCl, MgCl2, and CaCl2 (each at 0, 1, 2, or 3 bars osmotic pressure) was germinated in base culture medium. Pollen viability decreased more with NaCl than with MgCl2 or CaCl2. In vitro studies of the effects of three salts, viz., NaCl, MgCl2, and CaCl2, on pollen germination and tube growth showed that NaCl inhibited germination and pollen tube growth more than did MgCl2 or CaCl2. MgCl2 was least injurious, and even promoted tube growth at 0.5 and 0.75 bars osmotic pressure. Adding low concentrations of MgCl2 reduced the toxic effect of NaCl and increased the percentage of germination. CaCl2 reduced the effect of NaCl less than did MgCl2. We conclude that specific ion effects were more important than osmotic pressure.  相似文献   

17.
1. In the presence of 0.05 per cent dextrose the respiration of Aspergillus niger is increased by NaCl in concentrations of 0.25 to 0.5M, and by 0.5M CaCl2. 2. Stronger concentrations, as 2M NaCl and 1.25M CaCl2, decrease the respiration. The decrease in the higher concentrations is probably an osmotic effect of these salts. 3. A mixture of 19 cc. of NaCl and 1 cc. of CaCl2 (both 0.5M) showed antagonism, in that the respiration was normal, although each salt alone caused an increase. 4. Spores of Aspergillus niger did not germinate on 0.5M NaCl (plus 0.05 per cent dextrose) while they did on 0.5M CaCl2 (plus 0.05 per cent dextrose) and on various mixtures of the two. This shows that a substance may have different effects on respiration from those which it has upon growth.  相似文献   

18.
1. In relatively low concentrations of NaCl, KCl, and CaCl2 the rate of respiration of Bacillus subtilis remains fairly constant for a period of several hours, while in the higher concentrations, there is a gradual decrease in the rate. 2. NaCl and KCl increase the rate of respiration of Bacillus subtilis somewhat at concentrations of 0.15 M and 0.2 M respectively; in sufficiently high concentrations they decrease the rate. CaCl2 increases the rate of respiration of Bacillus subtilis at a concentration of 0.05 M and decreases the rate at somewhat higher concentrations. 3. The effects of salts upon respiration show a well marked antagonism between NaCl and CaCl2, and between KCl and CaCl2. The antagonism between NaCl and KCl is slight and the antagonism curve shows two maxima.  相似文献   

19.
1. Concentrations of MgCl2 up to 0.01 M have little effect upon the rate or respiration of Bacillus subtilis; at 0.03 M there is an increase in the rate, while in the higher concentrations there is a gradual decrease. 2. There is a well marked antagonism between MgCl2 and NaCl, and a very slight antagonism between MgCl2 and CaCl2.  相似文献   

20.
It was examined how essential cations, Ca2+ and K+, can mitigate the toxic effects of NaCl on two different almond species (Prunus amygdalus Batsch) rootstocks, Garnem (GN15) and Bitter Almond. The tree growth parameters (water potential (Ψw), gas exchange, nutrient uptake) and leaf chlorophyll (Chl) content were measured in control and NaCl-treated plants with or without KCl or CaCl2 supplements. The addition of CaCl2 and KCl to Bitter Almond trees reduced their dry weight, shoot growth and leaf number although net photosynthetic assimilation rate (A) was not affected. These results indicated that changing of photo-assimilates flux to proline and/or soluble sugars synthesis may help to increase leaf Ψw. The Garnem trees also did not respond to the CaCl2 and KCl addition indicating that the plants are already getting enough of these two cations (Ca2+ and K+). In both rootstocks, NaCl in the medium reduced growth attributes, Ψw, A, stomatal conductance (gs), and leaf Chl content. When CaCl2 and KCl fertilizers were added together with NaCl to Bitter Almond trees, leaf K+ and Ca2+ contents increased while Na+ and Cl decreased leading to higher Ca/Na and K/Na ratios, but shoot growth was not improved and even declined compared to NaCl-treated trees. It appears that the addition of salts further aggravated osmotic stress as indicated by the accumulation of proline and soluble sugars in leaf tissues. The addition of KCl or CaCl2 to NaCl-treated GN15 trees did not increase A, leaf Ψw, and shoot growth but improved ionic balances as indicated by higher Ca/Na and K/Na ratios. The reduction in A was mainly due to non-stomatal limitations in GN15, possibly due to the degradation of Chl a, unlike Bitter Almond, for which the reduction of A was due to stomata closure. The improvement in ionic balances and water status of Bitter Almond trees in response to addition of KCl or CaCl2 was apparently offset by a high sensitivity to Cl; therefore, no-chloride salts should be the preferred forms of fertilizers for this rootstock. Both rootstocks were sensitive to soil salinity and cation supplements were of limited value in mitigating the effect of excessive salt concentrations.  相似文献   

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