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1.
In response to osmotic perturbation, the Amphiuma red blood cell regulates volume back to "normal" levels. After osmotic swelling, the cells lose K, Cl, and osmotically obliged H2O (regulatory volume decrease [RVD] ). After osmotic shrinkage, cell volume is regulated as a result of Na, Cl, and H2O uptake (regulatory volume increase [RVI] ). As previously shown (Cala, 1980 alpha), ion fluxes responsible for volume regulation are electroneutral, with alkali metal ions obligatorily counter-coupled to H, whereas net Cl flux is in exchange for HCO3. When they were exposed to the Ca ionophore A23187, Amphiuma red blood cells lost K, Cl, and H2O with kinetics (time course) similar to those observed during RVD. In contrast, when cells were osmotically swollen in Ca-free media, net K loss during RVD was inhibited by approximately 60%. A role for Ca in the activation of K/H exchange during RVD was suggested from these experiments, but interpretation was complicated by the fact that an increase in cellular Ca resulted in an increase in the membrane conductance to K (GK). To determine the relative contributions of conductive K flux and K/H exchange to total K flux, electrical studies were performed and the correspondence of net K flux to thermodynamic models for conductive vs. K/H exchange was evaluated. These studies led to the conclusion that although Ca activates both conductive and electroneutral K flux pathways, only the latter pathways contribute significantly to net K flux. On the basis of observations that A23187 did not activate K loss from cells during RVI (when the Na/H exchange was functioning) and that amiloride inhibited K/H exchange by swollen cells only when cells had previously been shrunk in the presence of amiloride, I concluded that Na/H and K/H exchange are mediated by the same membrane transport moiety.  相似文献   

2.
Swelling-induced human erythrocyte K-Cl cotransport is membrane potential independent and capable of uphill transport. However, a complete thermodynamic analysis of basal and stimulated K-Cl cotransport, at constant cell volume, is missing. This study was performed in low K sheep red blood cells before and after reducing cellular free Mg into the nanomolar range with the divalent cation ionophore A23187 and a chelator, an intervention known to stimulate K- Cl cotransport. The anion exchange inhibitor 4,4''diisothiocyanato- 2,2''disulfonic stilbene was used to clamp intracellular pH and Cl or NO3 concentrations. Cell volume was maintained constant as external and internal pH differed by more than two units. K-Cl cotransport was calculated from the K effluxes and Rb (as K congener) influxes measured in Cl and NO3, at constant internal K and external anions, and variable concentrations of extracellular Rb and internal anions, respectively. The external Rb concentration at which net K-Cl cotransport is zero was defined as flux reversal point which changed with internal pH and hence Cl. Plots of the ratio of external Rb concentrations corresponding to the flux reversal points and the internal K concentration versus the ratio of the internal and external Cl concentrations (i.e., the Donnan ratio of the transported ions) yielded slopes near unity for both control and low internal Mg cells. Thus, basal as well as low internal Mg-stimulated net K-Cl cotransport depends on the electrochemical potential gradient of KCl.  相似文献   

3.
The monofunctional thiol reagents N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and methyl methanethiosulfonate (MMTS) stimulate ouabain resistant (OR) electroneutral K:Cl cotransport in LK sheep red blood cells at low, but not at high concentrations. Diamide (DM), on the other hand, only stimulates OR K:Cl flux (Lauf, P.K., J. Memb. Biol. 101: 179–188, 1988). The DM stimulated K:Cl cotransport was decreased toward the control value prior to DM stimulation when NEM or MMTS were added, subsequently. The inhibitory effect was dependent on the compound's concentration and exposure time and, in the case of MMTS, was reversed upon addition of dithiothreitol (DTT). The inhibition was more prominent when NEM treatment was performed at pH 8.0 and disappeared at pH 6.0. In contrast the NEM stimulatory effect was most effective when the pH of NEM treatment was 6.0 (Bauer, J. & Lauf, P.K., J. Memb. Biol. 73: 257–261, 1983). The results suggest the existence of additional, however, inhibitory thiol groups in the already thiol-activated K:Cl cotransporter, with a different pKa value and a lower affinity for NEM or MMTS as compared to the stimulatory thiol groups. Like the activating thiols, the inhibitory sulfhydryls appeared to be inaccessible to non-penetrating thiol reagents and hence, must be located deeper within the red cell membrane.  相似文献   

4.
Transmembrane electroneutral transport mechanisms [e.g., Na/H exchange, Cl/HCO3 exchange, (K + Cl) cotransport] have recently been identified in a wide variety of cell types. If these exchanges sum to give a net electroneutral Na/K exchange, they may hyperpolarize the membrane potential beyond the value calculated from the Mullins-Noda equation, provided the cell maintains steady state intracellular ionic concentrations. In extreme circumstances, the membrane potential could hyperpolarize beyond the potassium reversal potential. This effect is mediated by the electrogenic Na/K pump. If either Na or K exchanges electroneutrally against a third ion (e.g., Na/Ca exchange), then the exchange may depolarize the membrane potential.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Alteration in cell volume of vertebrates results in activation of volume-sensitive ion flux pathways. Fine control of the activity of these pathways enables cells to regulate volume following osmotic perturbation. Protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation have been reported to play a crucial role in the control of volume-sensitive ion flux pathways. Exposing Amphiuma tridactylu red blood cells (RBCs) to phorbol esters in isotonic medium results in a simultaneous, dose-dependent activation of both Na(+)/H(+) and K(+)/H(+) exchangers. We tested the hypothesis that in Amphiuma RBCs, both shrinkage-induced Na(+)/H(+) exchange and swelling-induced K(+)/H(+) exchange are activated by phosphorylation-dependent reactions. To this end, we assessed the effect of calyculin A, a phosphatase inhibitor, on the activity of the aforementioned exchangers. We found that exposure of Amphiuma RBCs to calyculin-A in isotonic media results in simultaneous, 1-2 orders of magnitude increase in the activity of both K(+)/H(+) and Na(+)/H(+) exchangers. We also demonstrate that, in isotonic media, calyculin A-dependent increases in net Na(+) uptake and K(+) loss are a direct result of phosphatase inhibition and are not dependent on changes in cell volume. Whereas calyculin A exposure in the absence of volume changes results in stimulation of both the Na(+)/H(+) and K(+)/H(+) exchangers, superimposing cell swelling or shrinkage and calyculin A treatment results in selective activation of K(+)/H(+) or Na(+)/H(+) exchange, respectively. We conclude that kinase-dependent reactions are responsible for Na(+)/H(+) and K(+)/H(+) exchange activity, whereas undefined volume-dependent reactions confer specificity and coordinated control.  相似文献   

7.
The red cell Na/K pump is known to continue to extrude Na when both Na and K are removed from the external medium. Because this ouabain-sensitive flux occurs in the absence of an exchangeable cation, it is referred to as uncoupled Na efflux. This flux is also known to be inhibited by 5 mM Nao but to a lesser extent than that inhibitable by ouabain. Uncoupled Na efflux via the Na/K pump therefore can be divided into a Nao-sensitive and Nao-insensitive component. We used DIDS-treated, SO4-equilibrated human red blood cells suspended in HEPES-buffered (pHo 7.4) MgSO4 or (Tris)2SO4, in which we measured 22Na efflux, 35SO4 efflux, and changes in the membrane potential with the fluorescent dye, diS-C3 (5). A principal finding is that uncoupled Na efflux occurs electroneurally, in contrast to the pump's normal electrogenic operation when exchanging Nai for Ko. This electroneutral uncoupled efflux of Na was found to be balanced by an efflux of cellular anions. (We were unable to detect any ouabain-sensitive uptake of protons, measured in an unbuffered medium at pH 7.4 with a Radiometer pH-STAT.) The Nao-sensitive efflux of Nai was found to be 1.95 +/- 0.10 times the Nao-sensitive efflux of (SO4)i, indicating that the stoichiometry of this cotransport is two Na+ per SO4=, accounting for 60-80% of the electroneutral Na efflux. The remainder portion, that is, the ouabain-sensitive Nao-insensitive component, has been identified as PO4-coupled Na transport and is the subject of a separate paper. That uncoupled Na efflux occurs as a cotransport with anions is supported by the result, obtained with resealed ghosts, that when internal and external SO4 was substituted by the impermeant anion, tartrate i,o, the efflux of Na was inhibited 60-80%. This inhibition could be relieved by the inclusion, before DIDS treatment, of 5 mM Cli,o. Addition of 10 mM Ko to tartrate i,o ghosts, with or without Cli,o, resulted in full activation of Na/K exchange and the pump's electrogenicity. Although it can be concluded that Na efflux in the uncoupled mode occurs by means of a cotransport with cellular anions, the molecular basis for this change in the internal charge structure of the pump and its change in ion selectivity is at present unknown.  相似文献   

8.
45Ca efflux from skinned muscle fibers is stimulated transiently, by a highly Ca2+-dependent mechanism, by KCl replacement of K propionate. In the present studies, Cl replaced the much less permeant anion methanesulfonate (Mes) either (a) at constant [K], in which increased [K][Cl] permits net KCl and water flux across internal membranes, or (b) at constant [K][Cl] (choline substitution), in which the imposed gradients and diffusion potentials should dissipate slowly. 45Ca efflux and isometric force were measured simultaneously on segments of frog semitendinosus fibers skinned by microdissection. EGTA was applied to chelate released 45Ca either (a) shortly after high [Cl] (interrupted response), to minimize reaccumulation, (b) before high [Cl] (pretreated response), to evaluate Ca2+ dependence, or (c) under control conditions in KMes. KCl replacement of KMes stimulated release of 65% fiber 45Ca within 1 min in interrupted responses; EGTA pretreatment was only moderately inhibitory with substantial residual stimulation. In contrast, choline Cl replacement of KMes induced release of 26-35% fiber 45Ca in interrupted responses; EGTA pretreatment was strongly inhibitory, but release significantly exceeded control with a small, sustained increase in Ca2+-insensitive efflux. These differences in 45Ca release and EGTA inhibition suggest that Cl replacement of Mes at constant [K] stimulates efflux by osmotic effects as well as imposed diffusion potentials; at least half the stimulated 45Ca loss (above control) in interrupted KCl responses is attributable to an osmotic component with low Ca2+ sensitivity. In the highly Ca2+-sensitive stimulation at constant [K][Cl], 45Ca release (above control) in interrupted responses correlated well with that in the pretreated responses of segments from the same fiber, with a slope of 8.4. This relationship suggests that imposed diffusion potentials stimulate a small Ca2+-insensitive component that gradates a much larger Ca2+-dependent efflux. The Ca2+-insensitive component apparently reflects intermediate steps in the excitation-contraction coupling that require positive feedback to result in sufficient Ca release for contraction.  相似文献   

9.
When Amphiuma red cells are shrunken in hypertonic media, they return toward their original volume by gaining Na through an amiloride-sensitive pathway. As cells recover their volume during this volume-regulatory increase (VRI) response, acid is extruded into the medium. Medium acidification is correlated with cell Na uptake. Both medium acidification and cell Na uptake are blocked by 10(-3) M amiloride or by replacing medium Na with K or choline. Perturbations that increase cell Na uptake (such as increasing medium osmolality) also increase medium acidification. As the medium becomes more acidic, the cells become more alkaline. These changes in cell and medium pH are increased if pH equilibration across the cell membrane is prevented by inhibiting the anion exchanger with SITS (4-acetamido-4'-isothiocyano-2,2'-stilbene disulfonic acid). The quantity of acid extruded by SITS-treated cells is the same as the quantity of Na gained, which strongly suggests 1:1 exchange of Na for H. Cell enlargement in SITS-treated cells results from the exchange of osmotically active Na ions for H ions that are not osmotically active when combined with cellular buffers. Previous evidence indicates that the normal VRI response involves an increase in the cellular content of Cl as well as Na. We show that SITS completely blocks net Cl uptake, which suggests that Cl enters via the anion exchanger. SITS also slows Na entry, presumably as a result of the above-mentioned increase in cell pH caused by SITS. We suggest that the initial event in the VRI response is net Na uptake via a Na/H exchanger, and that net Cl uptake results from secondary Cl/HCO3 exchange via the anion exchanger.  相似文献   

10.
We have recently reported the presence of an electroneutral (Na + K + 2 Cl) cotransport mechanism that is bumetanide-sensitive and maintains Cli above its electrochemical equilibrium in cultured chick heart cells. In steady state, (Na + K + 2 Cl) cotransport is inwardly directed and so contributes to the Na influx that must be counterbalanced by the activity of the Na/K pump to maintain Nai homeostasis. We now show that manipulating (Na + K + 2 Cl) cotransport by restoring Clo to a Cl-free solution indirectly influences Na/K pump activity because the bumetanide-sensitive recovery of a infNa supi to its control level and the accompanying hyperpolarization could be blocked by 10–4M ouabain. In another protocol, when the Na/K pump was reactivated by restoring Ko (from 0.5 mM to 5.4 mM) and removing ouabain, the recovery of aNa was attenuated by 10–4M bumetanide. The relatively slow rate of ouabain dissociation coupled with the activation of Na influx by (Na + K + 2 Cl) cotransport clearly establishes the interaction of these transport mechanisms in regulating Nai. Although (Na + K + 2 Cl) cotransport is electroneutral, secondary consequences of its activity can indirectly affect the electrophysiological properties of cardiac cells.  相似文献   

11.
The conductive (net) anion permeability of human red blood cells was determined from net KCl or K2SO4 effluxes into low K+ media at high valinomycin concentrations, conditions under which the salt efflux is limited primarily by the net anion permeability. Disulfonic stilbenes, inhibitors of anion exchange, also inhibited KCl or K2SO4 efflux under these conditions, but were less effective at lower valinomycin concentrations where K+ permeability is the primary limiting factor. Various concentrations of 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonate (DIDS) had similar inhibitory effects on net and exchange sulfate fluxes, both of which were almost completely DIDS sensitive. In the case of Cl-, a high correlation was also found between inhibition of net and exchange fluxes, but in this case about 35% of the net flux was insensitive to DIDS. The net and exchange transport processes differed strikingly in their anion selectivity. Net chloride permeability was only four times as high as net sulfate permeability, whereas chloride exchange is over 10,000 times faster than sulfate exchange. Net OH-permeability, determined by an analogous method, was over four orders of magnitude larger than that of Cl-, but was also sensitive to DIDS. These data and others are discussed in terms of the possibility that a common element may be involved in both net and exchange anion transport.  相似文献   

12.
Ehrlich ascites cells were preincubated in hypotonic medium with subsequent restoration of tonicity. After the initial osmotic shrinkage the cells recovered their volume within 5 min with an associated KCl uptake. The volume recovery was inhibited when NO-3 was substituted for Cl-, and when Na+ was replaced by K+, or by choline (at 5 mM external K+). The volume recovery was strongly inhibited by furosemide and bumetanide, but essentially unaffected by DIDS. The net uptake of Cl- was much larger than the value predicted from the conductive Cl- permeability. The undirectional 36Cl flux, which was insensitive to bumetanide under steady-state conditions, was substantially increased during regulatory volume increase, and showed a large bumetanide-sensitive component. During volume recovery the Cl- flux ratio (influx/efflux) for the bumetanide-sensitive component was estimated at 1.85, compatible with a coupled uptake of Na+ and Cl-, or with an uptake via a K+,Na+,2Cl- cotransport system. The latter possibility is unlikely, however, because a net uptake of KCl was found even at low external K+, and because no K+ uptake was found in ouabain-poisoned cells. In the presence of ouabain a bumetanide-sensitive uptake during volume recovery of Na+ and Cl- in nearly equimolar amounts was demonstrated. It is proposed that the primary process during the regulatory volume increase is an activation of an otherwise quiescent, bumetanide-sensitive Na+,Cl- cotransport system with subsequent replacement of Na+ by K+ via the Na+/K+ pump, stimulated by the Na+ influx through the Na+,Cl- cotransport system.  相似文献   

13.
The Ehrlich ascites tumor cell has been used as a model of an unspecialized mammalian cell, in an attempt to disclose the mechanisms involved in the regulation of cellular water and salt content. In hypotonic medium Ehrlich cells initially swell as nearly perfect osmometers, but subsequently recover their volume within about 10 min with an associated net loss of KCl, amino acids, taurine and cell water. The net loss of KCl takes place mainly via separate, conductive K+ and Cl- transport pathways, and the net loss of taurine through a passive leak pathway. Ca2+ and calmodulin appear to be involved in the activation of the K+ and Cl- channels, as well as the taurine leak pathway. In hypertonic medium Ehrlich cells initially shrink as osmometers, but subsequently recover their volume with an associated net uptake of KCl and water. In this case, the net uptake of KCl is the result of the activation of an electroneutral, Na+- and Cl- -dependent cotransport system with subsequent replacement of cellular Na+ by extracellular K+ via the Na+/K+ pump. In the present review we describe the ion and taurine transporting systems which have been identified in the plasma membrane of the Ehrlich ascites tumor cell. We have emphasized the selectivity of these transport pathways and their activation mechanisms. Finally, we propose a model for the activation of the conductive K+ and Cl- transport pathways in Ehrlich cells which includes Ca2+, leukotrienes, and inositol phosphate as intracellular second messengers.  相似文献   

14.
After osmotic perturbation, the red blood cells of Amphiuma exhibited a volume-regulatory response that returned cell volume back to or toward control values. After osmotic swelling, cell-volume regulation (regulatory volume decrease; RVD) resulted from net cellular loss of K, Cl, and osmotically obliged H2O. In contrast, the volume-regulatory response to osmotic shrinkage (regulatory volume increase; RVI) was characterized by net cellular uptake of Na, Cl, and H2O. The net K and Na fluxes characteristic of RVD and RVI are increased by 1-2 orders of magnitude above those observed in studies of volume-static control cells. The cell membrane potential of volume-regulating and volume-static cells was measured by impalement with glass microelectrodes. The information gained from the electrical and ion-flux studies led to the conclusion that the ion fluxes responsible for cell-volume regulation proceed via electrically silent pathways. Furthermore, it was observed that Na fluxes during RVI were profoundly sensitive to medium [HCO3] and that during RVI the medium becomes more acid, whereas alkaline shifts in the suspension medium accompany RVD. The experimental observations are explained by a model featuring obligatorily coupled alkali metal-H and Cl-HCO3 exchangers. The anion- and cation-exchange pathways are separate and distinct yet functionally coupled via the net flux of H. As a result of the operation of such pathways, net alkali metal, Cl, and H2O fluxes proceed in the same direction, whereas H and HCO3 fluxes are cyclic. Data also are presented that suggest that the ion-flux pathways responsible for cell-volume regulation are not activated by changes in cell volume per se but by some event associated with osmotic perturbation, such as changes in intracellular pH.  相似文献   

15.
The regulation of cell volume in response to anisotonic media, and in a broader perspective electroneutral alkali/metal H+ exchange transport, are currently areas of general interest to transport physiologists. In this paper I outline the basic features of volume-sensitive ion fluxes as studied with Amphiuma red blood cells. As has been shown in previous studies the alkali metal ion fluxes that are responsible for volume regulation by these cells are electroneutral by virtue of obligatory counter coupling with H+. The criteria for establishing the existence of electroneutral alkali metal/H+ exchange in these cells will be reviewed and expanded on. In the process, behavior and phenomena consistent with, as well as those unique to, electroneutral alkali metal/H+ exchange will be introduced, illustrated with experimental data, and discussed. Finally, based on thermodynamic considerations, kinetic behavior will be evaluated in terms of electroneutral alkali metal/H+ transport.  相似文献   

16.
The interference of glibenclamide, an antidiabetic sulfonylurea, with mitochondrial bioenergetics was assessed on mitochondrial ion fluxes (H+, K+, and Cl-) by passive osmotic swelling of rat liver mitochondria in K-acetate, KNO3, and KCl media, by O2 consumption, and by mitochondrial transmembrane potential (Deltapsi). Glibenclamide did not permeabilize the inner mitochondrial membrane to H+, but induced permeabilization to Cl- by opening the inner mitochondrial anion channel (IMAC). Cl- influx induced by glibenclamide facilitates K+ entry into mitochondria, thus promoting a net Cl-/K+ cotransport, Deltapsi dissipation, and stimulation of state 4 respiration rate. It was concluded that glibenclamide interferes with mitochondrial bioenergetics of rat liver by permeabilizing the inner mitochondrial membrane to Cl- and promoting a net Cl-/K+ cotransport inside mitochondria, without significant changes on membrane permeabilization to H+.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanism of activation of KCl cotransport has been examined in rabbit red blood cells. Previous work has provided evidence that a net dephosphorylation is required for activation of transport by cell swelling. In the present study okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatases, was used to test this idea in more detail. We find that okadaic acid strongly inhibits swelling-stimulated KCl cotransport. The IC50 for okadaic acid is approximately 40 nM, consistent with the involvement of type 1 protein phosphatase in transport activation. N-Ethylmaleimide (NEM) is well known to activate KCl cotransport in cells of normal volume. Okadaic acid, added before NEM, inhibits the activation of transport by NEM, indicating that a dephosphorylation is necessary for the NEM effect. Okadaic acid added after NEM inhibits transport only very slightly. After a brief exposure to NEM and rapid removal of unreacted NEM, KCl cotransport activates with a time delay that is similar to that for swelling activation. Okadaic acid causes a slight increase in the delay time. These findings are all consistent with the idea that NEM activates transport not by a direct action on the transport protein but by altering a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle. The simplest hypothesis that is consistent with the data is that both cell swelling and NEM cause inhibition of a protein kinase. Kinase inhibition causes net dephosphorylation of some key substrate (not necessarily the transport protein); dephosphorylation of this substrate, probably by type 1 protein phosphatase, causes transport activation.  相似文献   

18.
The SLC4A1/AE1 gene encodes the electroneutral Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger of erythrocytes and renal type A intercalated cells. AE1 mutations cause familial spherocytic and stomatocytic anemias, ovalocytosis, and distal renal tubular acidosis. The mutant mouse Ae1 polypeptide E699Q expressed in Xenopus oocytes cannot mediate Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchange or (36)Cl(-) efflux but exhibits enhanced dual sulfate efflux mechanisms: electroneutral exchange of intracellular sulfate for extracellular sulfate (SO(4)(2-)(i)/SO(4)(2-)(o) exchange), and electrogenic exchange of intracellular sulfate for extracellular chloride (SO(4)(2-)(i)/Cl(-)(o) exchange). Whereas wild-type AE1 mediates 1:1 H(+)/SO(4)(2-) cotransport in exchange for either Cl(-) or for the H(+)/SO(4)(2-) ion pair, mutant Ae1 E699Q transports sulfate without cotransport of protons, similar to human erythrocyte AE1 in which the corresponding E681 carboxylate has been chemically converted to the alcohol (hAE1 E681OH). We now show that in contrast to the normal cis-stimulation by protons of wild-type AE1-mediated SO(4)(2-) transport, both SO(4)(2-)(i)/Cl(-)(o) exchange and SO(4)(2-)(i)/SO(4)(2-)(o) exchange mediated by mutant Ae1 E699Q are inhibited by acidic pH(o) and activated by alkaline pH(o). hAE1 E681OH displays a similarly altered pH(o) dependence of SO(4)(2-)(i)/Cl(-)(o) exchange. Elevated [SO(4)(2-)](i) increases the K(1/2) of Ae1 E699Q for both extracellular Cl(-) and SO(4)(2-), while reducing inhibition of both exchange mechanisms by acid pH(o). The E699Q mutation also leads to increased potency of self-inhibition by extracellular SO(4)(2-). Study of the Ae1 E699Q mutation has revealed the existence of a novel pH-regulatory site of the Ae1 polypeptide and should continue to provide valuable paths toward understanding substrate selectivity and self-inhibition in SLC4 anion transporters.  相似文献   

19.
A detailed kinetic study of K:Cl cotransport in hyposmotically swollen low K sheep red blood cells was carried out to characterize the nature of the outwardly poised carrier. The kinetic parameters were determined from the rate of K efflux and influx under zero-K-trans conditions in red cells with cellular K altered by the nystatin method and with different extracellular K or Rb concentrations. Although apparent affinities for efflux and influx were quite similar, the maximal velocity for K efflux was approximately two times greater than for influx. Furthermore, at thermodynamic equilibrium (i.e., when the ion product of K and Cl within the cell was equal to that outside) a temperature-dependent net K efflux was observed, approaching zero only when the external product reached approximately two times the internal product. The binding order of the ions to the transporter was asymmetric, being ordered outside (Cl binding first, followed by K) and random inside. K efflux but not influx was trans-inhibited by KCl. Trans inhibition of K efflux was used to verify the order of binding outside: trans inhibition by external Cl occurred in the absence of external K, but not vice versa. Thus K:Cl cotransport is kinetically asymmetric in hyposmotically swollen low K sheep red cells.  相似文献   

20.
Anion transport systems in the plasma membrane of vertebrate cells   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
In the case of the red blood cell, anion transport is a highly specific one-for-one exchange catalyzed by a major membrane protein known as band 3 or as capnophorin. This red cell anion-exchange system mediates the Cl-(-)HCO3- exchange responsible for most of the bicarbonate transport capacity of the blood. The rapidly expanding knowledge of the molecular biology and the transport kinetics of this specialized transport system is very briefly reviewed in Section III. Exchange diffusion mechanisms for anions are found in many cells other than erythrocytes. The exchange diffusion system in Ehrlich cells has several similarities to that in red cells. In several cell types (subsection IV-B), there is evidence that intracellular pH regulation depends on Cl-(-)HCO3- exchange processes. Anion exchange in other single cells is described in Section IV, and its role in pH regulation is described in Section VII. Anion exchange mechanism operating in parallel with, and only functionally linked to Na+-H+ or K+-H+ exchange mechanisms can also play a role in cell volume regulation as described in Section VII. In the Ehrlich ascites cell and other vertebrate cells, electroneutral anion transfer has been found to occur also by a cotransport system for cations and chloride operating in parallel with the exchange diffusion system. The cotransport system is capable of mediating secondary active chloride influx. In avian red cells, the cotransport system has been shown to be activated by adrenergic agonists and by cyclic AMP, suggesting that the cotransport is involved in regulatory processes (see subsection V-A.). In several cell types, cotransport systems are activated and play a role during volume regulation, as described in Section V and in Section VII. It is also likely that this secondary active cotransport of chloride plays a significant role for the apparently active extrusion of acid equivalents from certain cells. If a continuous influx of chloride against an electrochemical gradient is maintained by a cotransport system, the chloride disequilibrium can drive an influx of bicarbonate through the anion exchange mechanism, as described in Section VII. Finally, even the electrodiffusion of anions is shown to be regulated, and in Ehrlich cells and human lymphocytes an activation of the anion diffusion pathway plays a major role in cell volume regulation as described in Section VI and subsection VII-B.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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