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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
4.
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   

5.
1) The activities of 16 enzymes of glycolysis and of glutathione metabolism were determined in intact human red cell membranes (ghosts) which were prepared by hypotonic hemolysis. 2) Enzymes and hemoglobin of the ghosts were resolved by two toluene extractions. Only the four enzymes hexokinase, fructose-bisphosphate aldolase, glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase and pyruvate kinase could not be released completely from the ghosts. 3) The residual membrane fraction, which was obtained after the toluene extraction of ghosts prepared at 30 imOsM, contained 0.02% of the original hemoglobin content of the red cell. Between 6.5 and 23% of the hemolysate activities of glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate kinase, pyruvate kinase and fructose-bisphosphate aldolase were detected in this fraction after mechanical disruption. 4) Sonication of intact ghosts increased the activities of fructose-bisphosphate aldolase, pyruvate kinase and phosphoglycerate kinase. 5) In "white" ghosts prepared at 5 imOsM phosphate buffer which contained 0.5% of the original hemoglobin the activities of fructose-bisphosphate aldolase and glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase were detected at high levels. The activities of pyruvate kinase and phosphoglycerate kinase were low in these preparations. 6) The results indicate that one part of all enzymes is loosely attached to the inner surface of the membrane as is hemoglobin. A second part, the "cryptic enzyme activity", is available after resolving by toluene. A residual part of four enzymes is firmly bound to the membrane. Two of them (fructose-bisphosphate aldolase and glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase) are oriented toward the inner surface of the membrane, whereas pyruvate kinase and phosphoglycerate kinase are hidden in the lipid core of the membrane.  相似文献   

6.
The reactions of three organic mercurial compounds, chlormerodrin, parachloromercuribenzoate (PCMB), and parachloromercuribenzenesulfonate (PCMBS) with intact red blood cells, hemolyzed red cells, hemoglobin solutions, and hemoglobin-free ghosts have been characterized. Both PCMB and PCMBS react with only 2 to 3 sulfhydryl groups per mole of hemoglobin in solution, whereas chlormerodrin reacts with 6 to 7. In hemoglobin-free ghosts, however, all three reagents react with a similar number of sulfhydryl groups, approximately 4 x 10-17 moles per cell, or about 25 per cent of the total stromal sulfhydryl groups, which react with inorganic mercuric chloride. In the intact cell the membrane imposes a diffusion barrier; chlormerodrin and PCMB penetrate slowly, whereas PCMBS does not. Kinetic studies of chlormerodrin binding to intact cells reveal that the majority of stromal sulfhydryl groups is located inside the diffusion barrier, with only 1 to 1.5 per cent (or 1 to 1,400,000 sites per cell) located outside of this barrier. Reaction of PCMBS with intact cells is limited to this small fraction on the outer membrane surface. All three reagents are capable of inhibiting glucose transport in the red cell. With chlormerodrin and PCMBS it was demonstrated that the inhibition results from interactions with the sulfhydryl groups located on the outer surface of the membrane.  相似文献   

7.
NMR water-proton spin-lattice relaxation times were studied as probes of water structure in human red blood cells and red blood cell suspensions. Normal saline had a relaxation time of about 3000 ms while packed red blood cells had a relaxation time of about 500 ms. The relaxation time of a red cell suspension at 50% hematocrit was about 750 ms showing that surface charges and polar groups of the red cell membrane effectively structure extracellular water. Incubation of red cells in hypotonic saline increases relaxation time whereas hypertonic saline decreases relaxation time. Relaxation times varied independently of mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration in a sample population. Studies with lysates and resealed membrane ghosts show that hemoglobin is very effective in lowering water-proton relaxation time whereas resealed membrane ghosts in the absence of hemoglobin are less effective than intact red cells.  相似文献   

8.
Interaction of acetylphenylhydrazine with oxyhemoglobin A in a hemolysate or in intact red cells resulted in the formation of ferrihemochromes as shown by a characteristic optical spectrum. The same optical spectrum was observed in a suspension of red cell ghosts containing numerous Heinz bodies. Electron paramagnetic resonance of actylphenylhydrazine-incubated red cells disclosed the presence of previously identified reversible ferrihemochromes, which can be reduced to functional hemoglobin, and irreversible ferrihemochromes, which cannot be reduced to functional hemoglobin. (Ferrihemochromes are defined as low spin forms of ferric hemoglobin having heme ligands endogenous to the protein structure). In contrast, only irreversible ferrihemochromes could be observed in ghosts containing Heinz bodies. In addition both optical and magnetic features of sulfhemoglobin were observed in an acetylphenylhydrazine-treated red cell hemolysate. Similar optical features are produced by the interaction of aromatic nitrogen-containg reductants with purified oxyhemoglobin in the presence of (NH4)2S. This reaction is not effected by the presence of catalase, suggesting that H2O2 is not an intermediate of the reaction. It is concluded that the mechanism of action of acetylphenylhydrazine with oxyhemoglobin is two-fold, ultimate reduction to high spin ferric hemoglobin followed by ferrihemochrome formation. Thus it appears that the pathway of denaturation of hemolytic anemias and thalassemia or induced by chemical reagents, entails a common route involving the formation of ferric hemoglobin by a reductive mechanism, followed by reversible ferrihemochromes, irreversible ferrihemochromes, and ultimately, precipitation.  相似文献   

9.
Interaction between phloretin and the red blood cell membrane   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Phloretin binding to red blood cell components has been characterized at pH6, where binding and inhibitory potency are maximal. Binding to intact red cells and to purified hemoglobin are nonsaturated processes approximately equal in magnitude, which strongly suggests that most of the red cell binding may be ascribed to hemoglobin. This conclusion is supported by the fact that homoglobin-free red cell ghosts can bind only 10% as much phloretin as an equivalent number of red cells. The permeability of the red cell membrane to phloretin has been determined by a direct measurement at the time-course of the phloretin uptake. At a 2% hematocrit, the half time for phloretin uptake is 8.7s, corresponding to a permeability coefficient of 2 x 10(-4) cm/s. The concentration dependence of the binding to ghosts reveals two saturable components. Phloretin binds with high affinity (K diss = 1.5 muM) to about 2.5 x 10(6) sites per cell; it also binds with lower affinity (Kdiss = 54 muM) to a second (5.5 x 10(7) per cell) set of sites. In sonicated total lipid extracts of red cell ghosts, phloretin binding consists of a single, saturable component. Its affinity and total number of sites are not significantly different from those of the low affinity binding process in ghosts. No high affinity binding of phloretin is exhibited by the red cell lipid extracts. Therefore, the high affinity phloretin binding sites are related to membrane proteins, and the low affinity sites result from phloretin binding to lipid. The identification of these two types of binding sites allows phloretin effects on protein-mediated transport processes to be distinguished from effects on the lipid region of the membrane.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Hypotonic human erythrocyte ghosts, devoid of the original glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase content of the red cell, bind added glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases, isolated from human erythrocytes, rabbit and pig muscle, as well as rabbit muscle aldolase. There are only slight differences in the affinities towards the various glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases. On the other hand, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases are bound much stronger than aldolase; in an equimolar mixture the former can prevent the binding of the latter, or replace previously bound aldolase at the membrane surface. Binding is always accompanied by the partial inactivation of enzymes, which can be reverted by desorption. Unwashed ghosts rich in hemoglobin seem to have a more pronounced inactivating effect on bound glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. In isotonic media ghosts, whether white or unwashed, reseal and do not interact with the enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
A fluorescent glucose analogue, 6-deoxy-N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)-aminoglucose (NBDG), was synthesized and its interactions with the hexose transport system of the human red blood cell were investigated. NBDG entry is inhibited by increasing concentrations of d-glucose (Ki = 2 mM). However, NBDG exit is unaffected by d-glucose in red blood cells. Cytochalasin B was found to inhibit both NBDG entry and exit. NBDG accumulates in the red blood cell above the theoretical equilibrium concentration. Accumulation of NBDG is temperature-sensitive and is due to the binding of NBDG to some intracellular substance. The binding of NBDG to purified hemoglobin suggests that accumulation of NBDG by erythrocytes is due to the intracellular binding of NBDG to hemoglobin. NBDG does not accumulate in pink erythrocyte ghosts, while its rate of uptake is still inhibited by d-glucose and cytochalasin B. Although there was no apparent d-glucose inhibition of NBDG exit by intact red blood cells, d-glucose was able to inhibit NBDG exit by pink erythrocyte ghosts. The differing properties of NBDG influx and efflux support the interpretation that the hexose transport system of the human red blood cell appears asymmetric although it may be intrinsically symmetric.  相似文献   

12.
Summary— Morphological study of red blood cell phagocytosis by Entamoeba histolytica-like (Laredo strain) has shown that this amoeba is able to ingest by two distinct mechanisms. One is classical phagocytosis and the other is by suction or microphagocytosis. Rigidification of red blood cells by treatment with glutaraldehyde shows that there is a correlation between the deformability of the ingested cell and the type of phagocytosis observed. Indeed, as the red cells become more rigid, less microphagocytosis is observed. To demonstrate that this shift in phagocytic mechanisms is not induced by the modification of a surface receptor by the glutaraldehyde treatment, the amoebas were fed with erythrocyte ghosts. Since these have lost most of their hemoglobin content, they are less rigid than the intact erythrocytes. The ghosts, even after glutaraldehyde treatment, are always ingested by microphagocytosis. These results have therefore led us to conclude that the type of erythrocyte phagocytosis used by E histolytica-like (Laredo strain) is determined by the deformability of the targetted red blood cells.  相似文献   

13.
Freeze-etching was applied to preparations, with and without glycerol, of Acinetobacter sp. strain MJT/F5/199A, consisting of intact cells after normal growth or after incubation with chloramphenicol, spheroplasts, and isolated cell walls and outer membranes. Etched preparations show that a regular array of subunits forms the surface of normal cells. Near the zones of constriction in dividing cells, blebs and irregularities are seen, and some blebs, consisting of both surface subunits and outer membrane, are released from the cells. The cross-fractured cell envelope shows four layers which are related to the structures seen in section as follows: cw1, which is not visible in section, contains the surface subunits; cw2 consists of all or part of the outer membrane; cw3 includes the intermediate and dense, peptidoglycan-containing layers; within these cell wall layers is the plasma membrane. Internal fracture of the plasma membrane occurs under all conditions tested, but the fracture plane in the cell wall is only revealed in chloramphenicol-treated cells or normal cells freeze-fractured with glycerol present; the characteristic fracture faces are not seen in spheroplasts or isolated outer membranes. The concave fracture face cw2 consists of densely packed granules, while the convex face cw3 is fibrillar. The probable location of this fracture plane is discussed. After incubation with chloramphenicol, the outer surface of the cells is obscured by extracellular material, the dense peptidoglycan-containing layer is increased in thickness, and the cytoplasm contains rounded bodies bounded by one or more unit membranes.  相似文献   

14.
Post-thaw suspension of red cells cryopreserved with hydroxyethyl starch (HES) gives rise to an increase in the quantity of supernatant hemoglobin and a reduction in cell recovery. This occurs regardless of the suspension media used but may be delayed by some solutions. Extended suspension with most solutions results in loss of intracellular contents from a number of cells. The resulting ghosts account for 12–14% of the total cell population. In the presence of 14% HES, deposits on the surface of damaged cells indicate that cellular contents are adherent to the cell membrane and therefore do not contribute to the free hemoglobin in the external solution. The result is a misleading high cell recovery value and suggests that this test does not accurately describe true cell damage in the presence of HES. Since the saline stability of suspended cells changes very little from that prior to suspension (at thaw), its value is a more accurate assessment of cell damage.  相似文献   

15.
"Band 3," an integral membrane protein of red blood cells, plays a relevant role in anionic transport. The C- and N-terminal portions of band 3 are cytoplasmatics, and the last is the link site for different glycolitic enzymes, such as glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, aldolase, phosphofructokinase, and hemoglobin. All or some of these interactions on the CDB3 protein could allow a subtle modulation of anion flux. The interaction among HbA, Mg(2+), and membrane proteins has been sufficiently investigated, but not the effect of Mg(2+) on pathological hemoglobin in relation to the influx of the SO(4)(2-). The aim of this study was to evaluate the involvement of hemoglobin S in sulfate transport. This has been measured with native and increased concentrations of Mg(2+), using normal erythrocytes containing HbA, sickle red cells containing HbS, or ghosts obtained from both erythrocytes and normal erythrocytes ghosts with HbS added. The magnitude of the SO(4)(2-) rate constant measured in normal red blood cells increased markedly when measured in the presence of varied Mg(2+) concentrations. The results show that a low increase of intracellular Mg(2+) concentrations exercises a different HbA modulation on band 3 protein and consequently higher anion transport activity. The same experiments carried out in sickle red cells showed that the SO(4)(2-) rate constant measured in the presence of native concentrations of Mg(2+) was normal, compared to normal red cells, and was not affected by any increase of intracellular Mg(2+). Our suppositions with regard to the importance exercised by the hemoglobin and the Mg(2+) on the SO(4)(2-) influx were confirmed by comparison of the data obtained through measuring SO(4)(2-) influx with native and increased concentrations of Mg(2+) in both normal and sickle red cell ghosts. Both revealed the same sensitivity to Mg(2+) due to withdrawal of hemoglobins. The incorporation of HbS in normal as well as in sickle red cell ghosts reduced the Mg(2+) response to sulfate influx in both the reconstituted ghosts. Our research demonstrated that the different effects exercised on the rate constants of SO(4)(2-) influx in normal (HbA) and sickle red cells (HbS) by the increased intracellular Mg(2+) could be ascribed to the physical-chemical influence exercised either on the hemoglobins or on the intracellular contents of erythrocytes.  相似文献   

16.
When rat red blood cells were incubated in a cadmium (Cd)-free medium following 1-h pretreatment with 0.5 mM CdCl2, incorporated Cd was retained in the cell during 14-h incubation and progressively accumulated in the membrane fraction, especially in the cytoskeleton fraction. In parallel to this accumulation, red cell filterability decreased and echinocytic cells increased, although intracellular ATP was maintained at the control level. The echinocytic shape was maintained in ghosts and cytoskeletons prepared from the Cd-loaded cells. In addition, the association of bands 2.1, 3, 4.2, and 4.5 with cytoskeletons increased and dissociation of cytoskeletal networks at low ionic strength decreased as the incubation time increased. Pretreatment of red blood cells with Cd also induced a release of small vesicles. These vesicles contained hemoglobin but were depleted of spectrin and actin, showing a phospholipid composition similar to that of red cell ghosts. These results suggest that the organization of cell membranes, especially cytoskeletal networks, is altered by Cd accumulation in the cytoskeleton fraction, which results in acceleration of age-related changes of red blood cells such as shape change and decreased filterability.  相似文献   

17.
Acanthocytic red blood cells in patients with abetalipoproteinemia have a decrease membrane fluidity that is associated with increased sphingomyelin/phosphatidylcholine (SM/PC) ratios. Here we describe studies designed to gain better insight into (i) the interrelationship between the composition of lipoprotein and red blood cell membrane in abetalipoproteinemia patients and normal controls; and (ii) how the differences in lipid composition of the red blood cell membrane affect its fluidity. The increased SM/PC ratio found in abetalipoproteinemia plasma high density lipoproteins (HDL) (3 times greater than controls) was paralleled by an increase in this ratio in acanthocytic red cells, but to a lesser degree (almost twice greater than control red cells). Cholesterol/phospholipid mole ratios (C/P) were increased 3-fold in abetalipoproteinemia HDL, but only slightly increased in red cells compared to controls values. As in the controls, 80-85% of abetalipoproteinemia red cell sphingomyelin was found to be in the outer half of the erythrocyte membrane. Membrane fluidity was defined in terms of microviscosity (eta) between 5 and 42 degrees C by the fluorescent polarization of 1,6-diphenylhexatriene (DPH) present in erythrocyte ghost membranes. At all temperatures, membrane microviscosity was higher in abetalipoproteinemia ghosts than controls, but these differences decreased at higher temperatures (12.34 vs 9.79 poise, respectively at 10 degrees C; 4.63 vs 4.04 poise at 37 degrees C). These differences were eliminated after oxidation of all membrane cholesterol to cholest-4-en-3-one by incubation with cholesterol oxidase. Following cholesterol oxidation, the membrane microviscosity decreased in patient ghosts more than in normal red blood cells so that at all temperatures no significant differences were present relative to control ghosts, in which the apparent microviscosity was also diminished but to a lesser degree. Therefore, although increased SM/PC ratios in abetalipoproteinemia may be responsible for decreased erythrocyte membrane fluidity, these effects are dependent upon normal interactions of cholesterol with red cell phospholipid.  相似文献   

18.
Resealed ghosts and intact red blood cells were directly compared with respect to their interactions with surface probes and to digestion by pronase. The amount and pattern of labelling of surface proteins by 4.4′-diisothiocyano-2,2′-stilbene disulfonic acid (DIDS) and by pyridoxal phosphate-borohydride (as seen after sodium dodecylsulfate/acrylamide gel electrophoresis) was substantially the same in cells and resealed ghosts under conditions in which a relatively small change would be apparent. In each membrane system, DIDS labels a protein component of apparent molecular weight 95 000 and pyridoxal phosphate labels the same protein plus three glycoprotein components. The sensitivity of surface proteins and of DIDS and pyridoxal phosphate-labelled sites to pronase was also similar in the cells and resealed ghosts. The glycoproteins were digested, in each case, and the 95 000 (molecular weight) protein was largely split into two portions of apparent molecular weights 65 000 and 35 000, with both portions containing DIDS and pyridoxal phosphate binding sites. The pattern of labelling of “leaky” ghosts by pyridoxal phosphate in the presence of hemoglobin was similar to the labelling of intact cells, provided that the pyridoxal phosphate was present on both the outside and inside of the cells. Virtually all of the major protein components visible by staining on acrylamide gels were labelled. It is concluded that none of the probes could detect any substatial differences in reactivity of proteins of the outer surface of the membrane of the ghosts as compared to the cells and that no irreversible changes in membrane protein conformation or arrangement occur as a consequence of lysis and resealing of ghosts, that are detectable by the reported procedures.  相似文献   

19.
S M Waugh  P S Low 《Biochemistry》1985,24(1):34-39
Hemichromes, the precursors of red cell Heinz bodies, were prepared by treatment of native hemoglobin with phenylhydrazine, and their interaction with the cytoplasmic surface of the human erythrocyte membrane was studied. Binding of hemichromes to leaky red cell ghosts was found to be biphasic, exhibiting both high-affinity and low-affinity sites. The high-affinity sites were shown to be located on the cytoplasmic domain of band 3, since (i) glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, a known ligand of band 3, competes with the hemichromes for their binding sites, (ii) removal of the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 by proteolytic cleavage causes loss of the high-affinity sites, and (iii) the isolated cytoplasmic domain of band 3 interacts tightly with hemichromes, rapidly forming a pH-dependent, water-insoluble copolymer upon mixing in aqueous solution. Since the copolymer of hemichromes with the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 was readily isolatable, a partial characterization of its properties was conducted. The copolymer was shown to be of defined stoichiometry, containing approximately 2.5 hemichrome tetramers (or approximately 5 hemichrome dimers) per band 3 dimer, regardless of the ratio of hemichrome:band 3 in the initial reaction solution. The copolymer was found to be of macroscopic dimensions, generating particles which could be easily visualized without use of a microscope. The coprecipitation was also highly selective for hemichromes, since, in mixed solutions with native hemoglobin, only hemichrome was observed in the isolated pellet. Furthermore, no precipitate was ever observed upon mixing the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 with oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, (carbonmonoxy) hemoglobin, or methemoglobin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
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   

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