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1.
The cytoplasmic pH of human neutrophils was determined fluorometrically using carboxylated fluorescein derivatives. When normal neutrophils were activated by the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) in Na+-containing medium, the cytoplasmic pH initially decreased but then returned to near normal values. In Na+-free media or in Na+ medium containing amiloride, TPA induced a marked monophasic intracellular acidification. The cytoplasmic acidification is associated with net H+ equivalent efflux, suggesting metabolic acid generation. The metabolic pathways responsible for the acidification were investigated by comparing normal to chronic granulomatous disease neutrophils. These cells are unable to oxidize NADPH and generate superoxide. When treated with TPA in Na+-free or amiloride-containing media, chronic granulomatous disease cells did not display a cytoplasmic acidification. This suggests that in normal cells NADPH oxidation and/or the accompanying activation of the hexose monophosphate shunt are linked to the acidification. Unlike normal neutrophils, chronic granulomatous disease cells treated with TPA in Na+-containing medium displayed a significant cytoplasmic alkalinization. The alkalinization was Na+-dependent and amiloride-sensitive, indicating activation of Na+/H+ exchange. Thus, the Na+/H+ antiport, which can be indirectly stimulated by the metabolic cytoplasmic acidification, is also directly activated by the phorbol ester.  相似文献   

2.
The intracellular pH (pHi) of rat thymocytes has been measured with the fluorescent probe 2', 7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein, both in the resting cells and under mitogenic stimulation. Concanavalin A (Con A) has been found to increase pHi from 7.16 +/- 0.02 to 7.30 +/- 0.02 during the first minutes after addition; the phorbol ester TPA raised pHi to 7.25 +/- 0.02. The Con A- and TPA-induced rise of pHi is due to activation of Na+/H+ exchange since it was abolished by amiloride, an inhibitor of Na+/H+ antiport, or in a low-Na+ medium. The elevation of intracellular cAMP level, decrease of cellular ATP, or the lowering of the temperature from 37 degrees down to 25 degrees C inhibited the pHi rise induced by Con A or TPA.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
Single smooth muscle cells were isolated from circular muscle of the canine gastric corpus by collagenase incubation. Cytoplasmic pH (pHi) of these cells was measured fluorometrically using the trapped dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein. Cells were examined for their Na+/H+ exchange activity after intracellular acidification. Cells acid-loaded by propionate exposure, the NH4+ prepulse technique or suspension in a Na+-depleted medium regained almost normal pHi upon exposure to a Na+ medium. The Na+-dependent alkalinization was amiloride sensitive. As well, addition of amiloride to cells suspended in a Na+ medium caused a concurrent decrease in pHi. The study indicates that a Na+/H+ antiport is present in these smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

7.
Na+/H+ exchange activity was investigated in cultured rat thyroid follicular FRTL-5 cells using the pH sensitive dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF). Basal intracellular pH (pHi) was 7.13 +/- 0.10 in cells incubated in Hepes-buffered saline solution. The intracellular buffering capacity beta i was determined using the NH4Cl-pulse method, yielding a beta i value of 85 +/- 12 mM/pH unit. The relationship between extracellular Na+ and the initial rate of alkalinization of acid-loaded cells showed simple saturation kinetics, with an apparent Km value of 44 +/- 26 mM, and an Vmax value of 0.3 +/- 0.01 pH unit/min. The agonist-induced activation of Na+/H+ exchange was investigated in cells acidified with nigericin. Addition of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) or ATP induced rapid cytosolic alkalinization in acid-loaded cells. The action of both TPA and ATP was abolished by preincubating the cells with 100 microM amiloride, by substituting extracellular Na+ with equimolar concentrations of choline+, and by pretreating the cells with TPA for 24 h. Chelating extracellular Ca2+, or depleating intracellular Ca2+ pools did not affect the ATP-induced alkalinization. The results indicate, that FRTL-5 cells have a functional Na+/H+ exchange mechanism. Furthermore, stimulation of protein kinase C activity is of importance in activating the antiport.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of the tumor-promoting phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) on cytoplasmic pH (pHi) and H+ extrusion was studied in the human monoblastic cell line U-937. About 2 min after addition of TPA, pHi started to increase and reached a steady state 10-15 min later. The resulting alkalinization corresponded to 0.03 and 0.09 pH units at 10(-10) and 10(-7) M TPA, respectively. The TPA-induced increase in pHi was independent of the presence of extracellular Na+. Moreover, TPA did not affect the H+ extrusion from the U-937 cells. Together these observations indicate the presence of a novel mechanism for TPA-induced cytoplasmic alkalinization. This mechanism is independent of Na+/H+ exchange across the plasma membrane, but may involve organelle sequestration of H+.  相似文献   

9.
The internal pH (pHi) of cytoplasts, derived from human neutrophils, falls 0.05 pH units upon activation of the superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase. The decrease in pHi is absent in diphenyleneiodonium-treated cytoplasts and therefore it is likely to arise directly from the activity of the oxidase. The addition of amiloride, to diminish the Na+/H+ exchanger, enhanced the extent of the internal acidification but not the initial rate. However the electroneutral Na+/H+ exchanger cannot be a contributor to H+ efflux to compensate for charge translocated by the oxidase. In the presence of Cd ions or valinomycin, phorbol-induced acidification of the cytosol was greatly increased, suggesting an inability to translocate the cytosolic H+ generated by an electrogenic oxidase. In the presence of both Cd and valinomycin the cytoplasts retained 0.8 H+ per O2-. generated. The rate of acidification of the external medium by stimulated cytoplasts is greatly reduced in the presence of Zn and valinomycin. Our results support the view that the plasma membrane of neutrophils contains Zn2+- or Cd2+-sensitive proton-conducting channels which maintain a stable membrane potential and pHi during the activity of the electrogenic NADPH oxidase.  相似文献   

10.
We determined the effect of okadaic acid (OA), a potent phosphoprotein phosphatase inhibitor, on the intracellular pH (pHi) of rat thymic lymphocytes and human bladder carcinoma cells. OA induced a rapid and sustained cytosolic alkalinization. This pHi increase was Na(+)-dependent and was inhibited by 5,N-disubstituted analogs of amiloride, indicating mediation by the Na+/H+ antiport. As described for other stimulants, such as mitogens and hypertonic challenge, activation of the antiport by OA is attributable to an upward shift in its pHi dependence. Accordingly, the alkalinization produced by the phosphatase inhibitor was not additive with that induced osmotically. Activation of the antiport by OA was accompanied by a marked increase in phosphoprotein accumulation, revealing the presence of active protein kinases in otherwise unstimulated cells. We considered the possibility that phosphorylation of the antiport itself or of an ancillary protein is responsible for activation of Na+/H+ exchange. Consistent with this notion, the alkalinization induced by OA was absent in ATP depleted cells. More importantly, immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated increased phosphorylation of the antiport following treatment with OA. We conclude that, upon inhibition of phosphoprotein phosphatase activity, constitutively active kinases induce the activation of Na+/H+ exchange, possibly by direct phosphorylation of the antiport.  相似文献   

11.
In several cell types, proliferation initiated by growth factors is associated with a rapid increase in cytoplasmic pH (pHi). This cytoplasmic alkalinization is due to the activation of an amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ antiport. It is unclear whether growth factor-induced activation of the antiport or the resultant increase in pHi is the trigger for proliferation, an obligatory requirement for proliferation, or simply an associated phenomenon. Interleukin 2 (IL 2) acts as a growth factor for mitogen or antigen-stimulated thymus-derived (T) lymphocytes. In this study, we established that IL 2 produces an increase in pHi and determined whether this increase in pHi plays a role in the proliferative response to IL 2. Monitoring pHi with an intracellularly trapped, pH-sensitive, fluorescent dye, 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein, we demonstrated that IL 2 rapidly (less than 90 s) initiates an increase in pHi in IL 2-sensitive human and murine T cells. Because intracellular alkalinization requires extracellular Na+ and is amiloride-sensitive, it likely occurs through activation of the Na+/H+ antiport. Using partitioning of a weak acid, 5,5-dimethyl-2,4-oxazolidinedione, we confirmed that the IL 2-dependent increase in pHi is sustained for several hours and returns to near base-line levels by 18 h. We also investigated the consequence of preventing Na+/H+ exchange on the proliferative response induced by IL 2. IL 2-driven proliferation occurred in nominally bicarbonate-free medium in the presence of concentrations of amiloride analogs sufficient to inhibit the Na+/H+ antiport and prevent intracellular alkalinization. These data suggest that although the antiport is activated by binding of IL 2 to its receptor, intracellular alkalinization is not essential for IL 2-dependent proliferation. It seems unlikely that either cytoplasmic alkalinization or activation of the Na+/H+ antiport are triggers for T cell proliferation.  相似文献   

12.
The regulation of intracellular pH (pHi) was monitored in a virus-transformed cell clone derived from bovine ciliary body exhibiting characteristics of pigmented ciliary epithelium. Data were obtained from confluent monolayers grown on plastic coverslips in nominally bicarbonate-free media using the pH-sensitive absorbance of 5- (and 6-) carboxy-4',5'-dimethylfluorescein. Under resting conditions, pHi averaged 6.98 +/- 0.01 (SEM; n = 57). When cells were acid loaded by briefly exposing them to Ringer containing NH4+ and then withdrawing the NH4+, pHi spontaneously regained its initial value. In the presence of 1 mM amiloride or in the absence of Na+, this process was blocked, indicating the involvement of an Na+/H+ exchanger in the regulation of pHi after an acid load. Removing Na+ during resting conditions decreased cytoplasmatic pH. This acidification could be slowed by amiloride, which is evidence for reversal of the Na+/H+ countertransport exchanging intracellular Na+ for extracellular protons. Application of 1 mM amiloride during steady state led to a slow acidification. Thus the Na+/H+ exchanger is operative during resting conditions extruding protons, derived from cellular metabolism, or from downhill leakage into the cell. Addition of Na+ to Na+ -depleted cells led to an alkalinization, which was sensitive to amiloride, with an IC50 of about 20 microM. This alkalinization was attributed to the Na+/H+ exchanger and exhibited saturation kinetics with increasing Na+ concentrations, with an apparent KM of 29.6 mM Na+. It is concluded that Na+/H+ exchange regulates pHi during steady state and after an acid load.  相似文献   

13.
Intracellular pH regulation during spreading of human neutrophils   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,133(6):1391-1402
The regulation of the intracelluar pH (pHi) during spreading of human neutrophils was studied by a combination of fluorescence imaging and video microscopy. Spreading on adhesive substrates caused a rapid and sustained cytosolic alkalinization. This pHi increase was prevented by the omission of external Na+, suggesting that it results from the activation of Na+/H+ exchange. Spreading-induced alkalinization was also precluded by the compound HOE 694 at concentrations that selectively block the NHE-1 isoform of the Na+H+ antiporter. Inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange by either procedure unmasked a sizable cytosolic acidification upon spreading, indicative of intracellular acid production. The excess acid generation was caused, at least in part, by the activation of the respiratory burst, since the acidification closely correlated with superoxide production, measured in single spreading neutrophils with dihydrorhodamine-123, and little acid production was observed in the presence of diphenylene iodonium, a blocker of the NADPH oxidase. Moreover, neutrophils from chronic granulomatous disease patients, which do not produce superoxide, failed to acidify. Comparable pHi changes were observed when beta 2 integrins were selectively activated during spreading on surfaces coated with anti-CD18 antibodies. When integrin engagement was precluded by pretreatment with soluble anti-CD18 antibody, the pHi changes associated with spreading on fibrinogen were markedly reduced. Inhibition of microfilament assembly with cytochalasin D precluded spreading and concomitantly abolished superoxide production and the associated pHi changes, indicating that cytoskeletal reorganization and/or an increase in the number of adherence receptors engaged are required for the responses. Neutrophils spread normally when the oxidase was blocked or when pHi was clamped near physiological values with nigericin. Spreading, however, was strongly inhibited when pHi was clamped at acidic values. Our results indicate that neutrophils release superoxide upon spreading, generating a burst of intracellular acid production. The concomitant activation of the Na+/H+ antiport not only prevents the deleterious effects of the acid released by the NADPH oxidase, but induces a net cytosolic alkalinization. Since several functions of neutrophils are inhibited at an acidic pHi, the coordinated activation of pHi regulatory mechanisms along with the oxidase is essential for sustained microbicidal activity.  相似文献   

14.
The contribution of Cl-/HCO3- exchange to intracellular pH (pHi) regulation in cultured chick heart cells was evaluated using ion-selective microelectrodes to monitor pHi, Na+ (aiNa), and Cl- (aiCl) activity. In (HCO3- + CO2)-buffered solution steady-state pHi was 7.12. Removing (HCO3- + CO2) buffer caused a SITS (0.1 mM)-sensitive alkalinization and countergradient increase in aiCl along with a transient DIDS-sensitive countergradient decrease in aiNa. SITS had no effect on the rate of pHi recovery from alkalinization. When (HCO3- + CO2) was reintroduced the cells rapidly acidified, aiNa increased, aiCl decreased, and pHi recovered. The decrease in aiCl and the pHi recovery were SITS sensitive. Cells exposed to 10 mM NH4Cl became transiently alkaline concomitant with an increase in aiCl and a decrease in aiNa. The intracellular acidification induced by NH4Cl removal was accompanied by a decrease in aiCl and an increase in aiNa that led to the recovery of pHi. In the presence of (HCO3- + CO2), addition of either amiloride (1 mM) or DIDS (1 mM) partially reduced pHi recovery, whereas application of amiloride plus DIDS completely inhibited the pHi recovery and the decrease in aiCl. Therefore, after an acid load pHi recovery is HCO3o- and Nao- dependent and DIDS sensitive (but not Ca2+o dependent). Furthermore, SITS inhibition of Na(+)-dependent Cl-/HCO3- exchange caused an increase in aiCl and a decrease in the 36Cl efflux rate constant and pHi. In (HCO3- + CO2)-free solution, amiloride completely blocked the pHi recovery from acidification that was induced by removal of NH4Cl. Thus, both Na+/H+ and Na(+)-dependent Cl-/HCO3- exchange are involved in pHi regulation from acidification. When the cells became alkaline upon removal of (HCO3- + CO2), a SITS-sensitive increase in pHi and aiCl was accompanied by a decrease of aiNa, suggesting that the HCO3- efflux, which can attenuate initial alkalinization, is via a Na(+)-dependent Cl-/HCO3- exchange. However, the mechanism involved in pHi regulation from alkalinization is yet to be established. In conclusion, in cultured chick heart cells the Na(+)-dependent Cl-/HCO3- exchange regulates pHi response to acidification and is involved in the steady-state maintenance of pHi.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
In a non-isotonic environment, cells can shrink or swell and return to their normal shape by activating ion transport pathways. Changes in intracellular pH (pHi) after osmotic stress have been identified in several cells. In order to study the mechanisms that regulate cytosolic pH of rat mast cells in a hypertonic medium, we used the pH sensitive dye, BCECF. Under these hypertonic conditions, pHi undergoes an alkalinization following an initial acidification. The alkalinization is mediated by a Na+/H+ exchanger, since it is inhibited by amiloride and lack of extracellular sodium. Under these conditions, the alkalinization is increased with the PKC activators, TPA and OAG, and partially blocked with trifluoperazine, an unspecific protein kinase C (PKC) and Ca2+ calmodulin-dependent protein kinases (Ca2+/CaM K) inhibitor. There is also an anion exchanger, blocked with DIDS but not activated by PKC, that participates in the observed alkalinization. However, Na+/H+ exchanger is the main mechanism involved in the alkalinization of pHi of mast cells in a hyperosmotic environment.  相似文献   

17.
The Na+/H+ exchange time-course of BCECF-loaded human platelets, suspended in isotonic media containing NaCl and sodium propionate and activated by intracellular acidification, was measured spectrofluorimetrically. Sequential alkalinization rates decline exponentially as a function of the changing intracellular pH (pHi) and its linear expression (log rate vs. pHi) extrapolates reproducibly to the pHi set point for the Na+/H+ exchange activation. The set point of control platelets (7.28 +/- 0.01) is shifted rapidly (discernibly less than or equal to 30 s) and markedly to alkaline pHi (7.62 +/- 0.03) by PMA, that activates protein kinase C and is shifted to acidic pHi (7.05 +/- 0.01) by staurosporine, which inhibits protein kinases. The addition of 5-N-(3-aminophenyl)amiloride reveals that the alkalinization measured is predominantly Na+/H+ exchange with only a minute contribution (delta pHi = 0.012 +/- 0.002 in 1 min) of an acid loading component, at pHi greater than 7.2. The results support recent studies concluding that the set point indeed reflects the phosphorylation state of the Na+/H+ exchanger.  相似文献   

18.
A technique is presented to estimate the initial rates of Na(+)-dependent alkalinization of acidified human fibroblasts and platelets and assess the kinetics of the Na+/H+ antiport in these cells. Cytosolic pH (pHi) exhibits an exponential recovery following cellular acidification. Thus, the length of the time interval selected to monitor changes in pHi (delta pHi) is critical to estimating the kinetics of the Na+/H+ antiport. We compared kinetic parameters of the Na+/H+ antiport, using computed and observed changes in delta pHi, for arbitrarily selected time intervals following Na(+)-dependent activation. In both cells, significant increases in both the [Na+] for half-maximal activation (K0.5) and maximal velocities (Vmax) were observed as delta pHi was decreased. We conclude that kinetic parameters derived from initial rate determinations enable a more accurate characterization of the Na+/H+ antiport.  相似文献   

19.
Activation of sodium/proton (Na+/H+) antiport activity has been shown to occur as an early event in mitogenesis. Because amiloride inhibits Na+/H+ antiport activity, it is hypothesized that mitogenesis may be inhibited by amiloride. In this work, we examined the effect of amiloride on DNA synthesis as measured by [3H]thymidine uptake and immunoglobulin (Ig) production as measured by an ELISA system in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM). Amiloride at 100 microM concentration inhibited irradiated Raji cell (*R)-activated and phytohemagglutinin-P (PHA-P)-stimulated DNA synthesis by 50 +/- 11% and 72 +/- 12%, respectively. IgG production was inhibited by 71% at 100 microM amiloride concentration in *R-activated PBM. This concentration of amiloride inhibited Na+/H+ antiport activity by 92%. Because amiloride is known to inhibit other pre-replicative cellular functions such as protein synthesis, we used an amiloride analogue, dimethylamiloride, which inhibited Na+/H+ antiport activity by 90% at a concentration of 1 microM without inhibition of PBM Ig or DNA synthesis. Furthermore, neither PHA-P nor *R-stimulated PBM demonstrated an intracellular alkalinization even after 6 hr of stimulation. Similarly, T cell-enriched or B cell-enriched populations did not show intracellular alkalinization after PHA-P or *R activation. Thus, it appears that Na+/H+ antiport activation is not an early event in PBM mitogenesis. The inhibition of mitogenesis by amiloride may be due to abrogation of premitotic events such as protein synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
This study investigated fluctuations of cytosolic pH (pHi) of cultured rat vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) in reaction to metabolic alterations induced by angiotensin II (AII). Serially passed VSMCs from Wistar rat aortae were grown on coverslips and loaded with the pH-sensitive fluorescent indicator 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein. A biphasic reaction was seen after exposure of these cells to AII (1 nM to 1 microM); an initial and relatively brief phase of acidification was followed by sustained alkalinization. The rate of acidification and magnitude of alkalinization were dose-dependent. This biphasic effect of AII was also demonstrated in Ca2+-free medium and was mimicked by subjecting VSMCs to the calcium ionophore A23187 (5 microM) in Ca2+-containing medium but not in Ca2+-free medium. Verapamil (10 microM) almost entirely eliminated the AII-induced acidification, whereas amiloride analogues 5-(N-methyl-N-isobutyl)amiloride and 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)amiloride (100 microM) as well as Na+-deficient medium abolished the subsequent (alkalinization) phase produced by the hormone. Activation of the Na+/H+ antiport by subjecting VSMCs to phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (100 nM) prevented a subsequent effect of AII on the pHi profile. This resistance to a further action of the hormone was not mediated via cytoplasmic alkalinization. AII produced a dramatic redistribution in the cellular compartments of 45Ca2+ associated with accelerated 45Ca2+ washout. These findings suggest that the AII-induced acidification phase may relate to activation of the Ca2+ pump (Ca2+/H+ exchange) and that this process can take place in the presence and absence of extracellular Ca2+. The alkalinization phase is the consequence of stimulation of the Na+/H+ antiport, which in cultured VSMCs can be activated by a rise in cytosolic free Ca2+ as well as other mechanisms.  相似文献   

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