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1.
Volume-induced increase of anion permeability in human lymphocytes   总被引:14,自引:7,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM) readjust their volumes after swelling in hypotonic media. This regulatory volume decrease (RVD) is associated with a loss of cellular K+ and is thought to be promoted by an increased permeability to this ion. In contrast, no change in volume was observed when K+ permeability of PBM in isotonic media was increased to comparable or higher levels using valinomycin. Moreover, valinomycin-induced 86Rb+ loss in K+-free medium was considerably slower than in K+-rich medium. These results suggest that anion conductance limits net salt loss in isotonic media. Direct measurements of relative conductance confirmed that in volume-static cells, anion conductance is lower than that of K+. In volume-regulating cells depolarization occurred presumably as a result of increased anion conductance. Accordingly, the efflux of 36Cl from PBM was markedly increased by hypotonic stress. Since both membrane potential and intracellular 36Cl concentration are reduced in hypotonically swollen cells, the increased efflux is probably due to a change in Cl- permeability. Anions and cations seem to move independently through the volume-induced pathways: the initial rate of 86Rb uptake in swollen cells was not affected by replacement of external Cl- by SO=4; conversely, 36Cl fluxes were unaffected by substitution of K+ by Na+. The data indicate that anion conductance is rate-determining in salt and water loss from PBM. An increase in anion conductance is suggested to be the critical step of RVD of human PBM.  相似文献   

2.
1. The responses of primary monolayer astrocyte cultures prepared from neonatal rat brains to hyper- and hypotonic media and to the addition of L-glutamic acid were examined as part of a systematic approach to use these cultures to obtain information on the mechanisms of the volume changes seen in astroglial cells in situ. 2. Addition of 200 mM mannitol to the medium to make it hypertonic caused cell shrinkage as measured with [14C]3-O-methyl-D-glucose, and also activated K+ and Cl- uptake measured with 86Rb+ and 36Cl- respectively. The increased ion uptake was completely inhibited by 0.1 mM bumetanide, showing that the Na+ + K+ + 2 Cl- co-transport system was being activated by cell shrinkage. 3. Studies of 86Rb+ uptake as a function of external K+ and hypertonic media showed a complex pattern. Increased bumetanide-sensitive, hypertonic-stimulated uptake of 86Rb+ was seen up to 20 mM K+0, with maximum stimulation being first reached at around 2 to 5 mM K+. At concentrations greater than 20 mM K+0 there was a further increase in bumetanide-sensitive 86Rb+ uptake, but there was no stimulation of this uptake by hypertonicity. There were also increases in bumetanide-insensitive 86Rb+ fluxes at [K+]0 higher than 20 mM that may have been due to opening of voltage-dependent K+ channels; this increased 86Rb+ flux was decreased in hypertonic medium. 4. When primary astrocyte cultures were swollen in hypotonic medium there was a rapid increase in volume as measured with [14C] 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, which then decreased in the continued presence of hypotonic medium. Thus, these cells exhibit volume regulatory decrease or RVD, as described for other cells. The possible ionic bases of this phenomenon have not yet been fully examined but the initial RVD did not appear to stimulate a furosemide-sensitive cotransport system. 5. Glutamate has been implicated as a possible endogenous effector of volume change in astrocytes. In the presence of ouabain, L-glutamate led to swelling of cultured astrocytes and increased uptake of 22Na+ and 36Cl-. It is suggested that this is due to uptake of L-glutamate with cotransport of Na+ and Cl-. Increased uptake was also seen for 86Rb+ in the absence of ouabain, and this was not seen in the absence of Na+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The transient increase in cation permeability observed in duck red cells incubated with norepinephrine has been shown to be a linked, bidirectional, co-transport of sodium plus potassium. This pathway, sensitive to loop diuretics such as furosemide, was found to have a [Na + K] stoichiometry of 1:1 under all conditions tested. Net sodium efflux was inhibited by increasing external potassium, and net potassium efflux was inhibited by increasing external sodium. Thus, the movement of either cation is coupled to, and can be driven by, the gradient of its co-ion. There is no evidence of trans stimulation of co- transport by either cation. The system also has a specific anion requirement satisfied only by chloride or bromide. Shifting the membrane potential by varying either external chloride (at constant internal chloride) or external potassium (at constant internal potassium in the presence of valinomycin and DIDs [4,4'-diisothiocyano- 2,2'-disulfonic acid stilbene]), has no effect on nor-epinephrine- stimulated net sodium transport. Thus, this co-transport system is unaffected by membrane potential and is therefore electrically neutral. Finally, under the latter conditions-when Em was held constant near EK and chloride was not at equilibrium-net sodium extrusion against a substantial electrochemical gradient could be produced by lowering external chloride at high internal concentrations, thereby demonstrating that the anion gradient can also drive co-transport. We conclude, therefore, that chloride participates directly in the co- transport of [Na + K + 2Cl].  相似文献   

4.
Red blood cells of several species are known to exhibit a ouabain-insensitive, anion-dependent K+ (Rb+) flux that is stimulated by cell swelling. We have used rabbit red cells to study the kinetics of activation and inactivation of the flux upon step changes in tonicity. Sudden hypotonic swelling (210 mosmol) activates the flux after a lag period of 10 min at 37 degrees C and 30-50 min at 25 degrees C. In cells that were preswollen to activate the transporter, sudden shrinkage (by addition of hypertonic NaCl) causes a rapid inactivation of the flux; the time lag for inactivation is less than 2 min at 37 degrees C. A minimal model of the volume-sensitive KCl transport system requires two states of the transporter. The activated (A) state catalyzes transport at some finite rate (turnover number unknown because the number of transporters is unknown). The resting (R) state has a much lower or possibly zero transport rate. The interconversion between the states is characterized by unimolecular rate constants R k12 in equilibrium with k21 A. The rate of relaxation to any new steady state is equal to the sum of the rate constants k12 + k21. Because the rate of transport activation in a hypotonic medium is lower than the rate of inactivation in an isotonic medium, we conclude that the volume-sensitive rate process is inactivation (the A to R transition); that is, cell swelling activates transport by lowering k21. Three phosphatase inhibitors (fluoride, orthovanadate, and inorganic phosphate) all inhibit the swelling-activated flux and also slow down the rate of approach to the swollen steady state. This finding suggests that a net dephosphorylation is necessary for activation of the flux and that the net dephosphorylation takes place as a result of swelling-induced inhibition of a kinase rather than stimulation of a phosphatase.  相似文献   

5.
Volume-sensitive K transport in human erythrocytes   总被引:13,自引:5,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Studies have been carried out on human erythrocytes to examine the alterations of K transport induced by swelling or shrinking the cells by osmotic and isosmotic methods. Hypotonic swelling of erythrocytes (relative cell volume, 1.20) resulted in a striking, four- to fivefold augmentation in the ouabain-resistant K influx over the value obtained at a normal cell volume. Shrinking the cells in hypertonic media resulted in a small but statistically significant reduction in K influx. Three different methods of varying cell volume gave similar results. These include the addition of sucrose and of NaCl to hypotonic media and the isosmotic (nystatin) method. The major fraction of the K influx in swollen cells is specific in its requirement for Cl or Br and is not supported by thiocyanate, iodide, nitrate, methylsulfate, or acetate. Bumetanide (0.1 mM), MK-196 (0.2 mM), and piretanide (1 mM) are poorly effective in suppressing K uptake in swollen cells, but at higher concentrations, bumetanide (1 mM) inhibits 80% of the Cl-dependent K influx in swollen cells. The bumetanide concentration required to inhibit 50% of the Cl-dependent K influx is 0.17 mM. The volume-sensitive K influx is independent of both extracellular and intracellular Na, so that the (Na + K + 2Cl) cotransport pathway is not a likely mediator of the volume-sensitive K transport. A variety of inhibitors of the Ca-activated K channel are ineffective in suppressing swelling-induced K influx. Like K uptake, the efflux of K is also enhanced by cell swelling. Swelling-activated K efflux is Cl dependent, is independent of extracellular and intracellular Na, and is observed with both hypotonic and isosmotic methods of cell swelling. The activation of K efflux by cell swelling is observed in K-free media, which suggests that the volume-sensitive K transport pathway is capable of net K efflux. The addition of external K to hypotonic media resulted in an increase in K efflux compared with the efflux in K-free media, and this increase was probably due to K/K exchange. Thus, hypotonic or isosmotic swelling of human erythrocytes results in the activation of a ouabain-resistant, Cl-dependent, Na-independent transport pathway that is capable of mediating both net K efflux and K/K exchange.  相似文献   

6.
Previous experiments indicate that the apical membrane of the frog retinal pigment epithelium contains electrogenic Na:K pumps. In the present experiments net potassium and rubidium transport across the epithelium was measured as a function of extracellular potassium (rubidium) concentration, [K]0 ( [Rb]0). The net rate of retina-to-choroid 42K(86Rb) transport increased monotonically as [K]0 ( [Rb]0) increased from approximately 0.2 to 5 mM on both sides of the tissue or on the apical (neural retinal) side of the tissue. No further increase was observed when [K]0 ( [Rb]0) was elevated to 10 mM. Net sodium transport was also stimulated by elevating [K]0. The net K transport was completely inhibited by 10-4 M ouabain in the solution bathing the apical membrane. Ouabain inhibited the unidirectional K flux in the direction of net flux but had no effect on the back-flux in the choroid-to-retina direction. The magnitude of the ouabain-inhibitable 42K(86Rb) flux increased with [K]0 ( [Rb]0). These results show that the apical membrane Na:K pumps play an important role in the net active transport of potassium (rubidium) across the epithelium. The [K]0 changes that modulate potassium transport coincide with the light-induced [K]0 changes that occur in the extracellular space separating the photoreceptors and the apical membrane of the pigment epithelium.  相似文献   

7.
Three independent mutants of the Madin-Darby canine kidney cell line (MDCK) have been isolated which were capable of growth in media containing low concentrations of potassium. All three mutants were deficient to varying extents in furosemide- and bumetanide-sensitive 22Na+, 86+b+, and 36Cl- uptake. The two mutants most resistant to low K+ media had lost essentially all of the 22Na+, 86Rb+, and 36Cl- uptake activities of this system. The third mutant was partially resistant to low K+ media and had reduced levels of bumetanide-sensitive uptake for all three ions. Extrapolated initial uptake rates for 22Na+, 86Rb+, and 36Cl- revealed that the partial mutant exhibited approximately 50% of the parental uptake rates for all three ions. The stoichiometries of bumetanide-sensitive uptake in both the parental cell line and the partial mutant approximated 1 Rb+:1 Na+:2 Cl-. The results of this study provide genetic evidence for a single tightly-coupled NaCl/KCl symporter in MDCK cells. The correlation between the ability to grow in low K+ media and decreased activity of the bumetanide-sensitive co-transport system suggests that the bumetanide-sensitive transport system catalyzes net K+ efflux from cells in low K+ media. The results of 86Rb+ efflux studies conducted on ouabain-pretreated mutant and parental cells are consistent with this interpretation. Cell volume measurements made on cells at different densities in media containing normal K+ concentrations showed that none of the mutants differed significantly in volume from the parental strain at a similar cell density. Furthermore, all three mutants were able to readjust their volume after suspension in hypotonic media. These results suggest that in the MDCK cell line, the bumetanide-sensitive NaCl/KCl symport system does not function in the regulation of cell volume under the conditions employed.  相似文献   

8.
Bumetanide is a potent inhibitor of cation-chloride co-transport systems in many cell types, including duck red cells. We studied equilibrium binding of [3H]bumetanide to intact duck red cells under a number of conditions known to affect (Na + K + 2Cl) co-transport in these cells. Saturable [3H]bumetanide binding to duck red cells is markedly stimulated by addition of norepinephrine or cell shrinkage, conditions which similarly stimulate co-transport. In the presence of norepinephrine and saturating concentrations of extracellular sodium, potassium, and chloride for the co-transporter, we found approximately 1000 [3H]bumetanide-binding sites/red cell, and measurement of 24Na+ influx on the same cells yielded a turnover number of approximately 4000/s for the co-transporter. 24Na+ influx was negatively correlated with the amount of bound [3H]bumetanide, and both saturable binding and inhibition of influx were half-maximal at approximately 10(-7) M [3H]bumetanide. Binding of [3H]bumetanide to duck red cells is stimulated in a saturable manner by increasing extracellular sodium and potassium. Chloride has a biphasic effect on [3H]bumetanide binding; increasing [Cl-]o (by replacement of methylsulfate) from 0 to 32 mM markedly enhances binding, whereas further increasing [Cl-]o to 160 mM inhibits binding. This behavior is similar to that reported for bumetanide inhibition of duck red cell (Na + K + 2Cl) co-transport (Haas, M., and McManus, T. J. (1983) Am. J. Physiol. 245, C235-C240; Haas, M., and McManus, T. J. (1982) Biophys. J. 37, 214a) and [3H]bumetanide binding to membranes from dog kidney outer medulla (Forbush, B. III, and Palfrey, H. C. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 11787-11792).  相似文献   

9.
In basolateral membrane vesicles (BLMV) isolated from rat parotid glands, the initial rate of ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport, in the presence of KCl, was approx. 2-fold higher than that obtained with mannitol, sucrose or N-methyl-D-glucamine (NMDG)-gluconate. Only NH4+, Rb+, or Br- could effectively substitute for K+ or Cl-, respectively. This KCl activation was concentration dependent, with maximal response by 50 mM KCl. An inwardly directed KCl gradient up to 50 mM KCl had no effect on Ca2+ transport, while equilibration of the vesicles with KCl (greater than 100 mM) increased transport 15-20%. In presence of Cl-, 86Rb+ uptake was 2.5-fold greater than in the presence of gluconate. 0.5 mM furosemide inhibited 86Rb+ flux by approx. 60% in a Cl- medium and by approx. 20% in a gluconate medium. Furosemide also inhibited KCl activation of Ca2+ transport with half maximal inhibition either at 0.4 mM or 0.05 mM, depending on whether 45Ca2+ transport was measured with KCl (150 mM) equilibrium or KCl (150 mM) gradient. In a mannitol containing assay medium, potassium gluconate loaded vesicles had a higher (approx. 25%) rate of Ca2+ transport than mannitol loaded vesicles. Addition of valinomycin (5 microM) to potassium gluconate loaded vesicles further stimulated (approx. 30%) the Ca2+ transport rate. These results suggest that during ATP dependent Ca2+ transport in parotid BLMV, K+ can be recycled by the concerted activities of a K+ and Cl- coupled flux and a K+ conductance.  相似文献   

10.
In order to investigate whether Na+ participates in loop diuretic-sensitive Cl(-)-cation co-transport in the beta-cells, we tested the interaction between the effects of Na+ deficiency, furosemide and D-glucose on 86Rb+ fluxes in beta-cell-rich mouse pancreatic islets. Removal of extracellular Na+ slightly reduced the ouabain-resistant 86Rb+ influx and the specific effect of 1 mM furosemide on this influx was significantly smaller in Na(+)-deficient medium. The capacity of 20 mM D-glucose to reduce the ouabain-resistant 86Rb+ influx was not changed by removal of extracellular Na+. The 86Rb+ efflux from preloaded islets was rapidly and reversibly reduced by Na+ deficiency. Furosemide (1 mM) reduced the 86Rb+ efflux and the effect of the combination of Na+ deficiency and 1 mM furosemide was not stronger than the effect of furosemide alone. 22Na+ efflux was reduced by both ouabain and furosemide and the effects appeared to be additive. The data suggest that Na+ participates in loop diuretic-sensitive Cl(-)-cation co-transport in the pancreatic beta-cells. This adds further support to the idea that beta-cells exhibit a Na+, K+, Cl- co-transport system. Since some of the furosemide effect on 86Rb+ efflux persisted in the Na(+)-deficient medium, it is likely that also loop diuretic-sensitive K+, Cl- co-transport exists in this cell type.  相似文献   

11.
This review discusses the activation of ion transport pathways during regulatory volume decrease in opossum kidney (OK) cells. OK cells regulate their volume when exposed to a hypotonic medium. The changes in cell volume are caused by activation of ion transport pathways and the accompanying osmotically driven water movement so that the increased cell volume returns toward physiological levels. The reshrinking of hypotonically swollen cells is termed regulatory volume decrease. In OK cells separate K+ and Cl- conductances are activated. The Na+/H+ cotransport system seems not to be involved. The potassium pathway is mediated by a K+ channel with a slope conductance of about 12 pS. The occasionally observed widely distributed Ca2(+)- and voltage-dependent K+ channel of large unit conductance (120 pS) seems not to be involved. The volume regulatory decrease is accompanied by a cell depolarization from a resting potential of about -60 mV to about -20 mV followed by a repolarization. It will be discussed whether the depolarization is caused by the observed activation of stretch-sensitive ion channels of about 30 and 40 pS, respectively. The transient behavior of the cell volume parallels the time-dependent change of the total membrane current. For both recording techniques the volume regulatory decrease can be blocked by quinine. In addition an inward rectifying K+ channel of about 80 pS has been observed in high KCl solution.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
1. Addition of 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene to isolated perfused rat liver results in the rapid formation of its glutathione-S-conjugate [S-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)glutathione], which is released into both, bile and effluent perfusate. Anisotonic perfusion did not affect total S-conjugate formation, but release of the S-conjugate into the perfusate was increased (decreased) following hypertonic (hypotonic) exposure at the expense of excretion into bile. Stimulation of S-conjugate release into the perfusate following hypertonic exposure paralleled the time course of volume-regulatory net K+ uptake. 2. Basal steady-state release of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) into bile was 1.30 +/- 0.12 nmol.g-1.min-1 (n = 18) during normotonic (305 mOsmol/l) perfusion and was 3.8 +/- 0.3 nmol.g-1.min-1 in the presence of t-butylhydroperoxide (50 mumol/l). Hypotonic exposure (225 mOsmol/1) lowered both, basal and t-butylhydroperoxide (50 mumol/l)-stimulated GSSG release into bile by 35% and 20%, respectively, whereas hypertonic exposure (385 mOsmol/l) increased. Anisotonic exposure was without effect on t-butylhydroperoxide removal by the liver. GSSG release into bile also decreased by 33% upon liver-cell swelling due to addition of glutamine plus glycine (2 mmol/l, each). 3. Hypotonic exposure led to a persistent stimulation 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glucose by about 80%, whereas 14CO2 production from [6-14C]glucose increased by only 10%. Conversely, hypertonic exposure inhibited 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glucose by about 40%, whereas 14CO2 production from [6-14C]glucose was unaffected. The effect of anisotonicity on 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glucose was also observed in presence of t-butylhydroperoxide (50 mumol/l), which increased 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glucose by about 40%. 4. t-Butylhydroperoxide (50 mumol/l) was without significant effect on volume-regulatory K+ fluxes following exposure to hypotonic (225 mOsmol/l) or hypertonic (385 mOsmol/l) perfusate. Lactate dehydrogenase release from perfused rat liver under the influence of t-butylhydroperoxide was increased by hypertonic exposure compared to hypotonic perfusions. 5. The data suggest that hypotonic cell swelling stimulates flux through the pentose-phosphate pathway and diminishes loss of GSSG under conditions of mild oxidative stress. Hypotonically swollen cells are less prone to hydroperoxide-induced lactate dehydrogenase release than hypertonically shrunken cells. Hypertonic cell shrinkage stimulates the excretion of glutathione-S-conjugates into the sinusoidal circulation at the expense of biliary secretion.  相似文献   

14.
1. In the presence of near-physiological glutamine concentrations, exposure of perfused rat liver to hypotonic perfusion media switched glutamine balance across the liver from net release to net uptake. This was due to both stimulation of flux through glutaminase and inhibition of flux through glutamine synthetase. Conversely, during exposure to hypertonic media, net glutamine release from the liver increased due to inhibition of glutaminase flux and slight stimulation of flux through glutamine synthetase. The effect of perfusate osmolarity on glutaminase flux was observed at an NH4Cl concentration (0.5 mM) sufficient for near-maximal ammonia stimulation of glutaminase. This indicates the involvement of different mechanisms of glutaminase flux control by extracellular osmolarity changes and ammonia. The effects of anisotonicity on flux through glutamine-metabolizing enzymes were fully reversible. Glutamine (0.6 mM) stimulated urea synthesis from NH4Cl (0.5 mM) during hypotonic and normotonic conditions. 2. Exposure to hypotonic and hypertonic media led, after initial liver-cell swelling and shrinkage, respectively to volume-regulatory K+ fluxes which largely restored the initial liver-cell volume despite the continuing osmotic challenge. Even after completion of cell-volume regulatory K+ fluxes, the effects of perfusate osmolarity on hepatic glutamine metabolism persisted. This indicates that in anisotonicity the liver cell is left in an altered metabolic state, even after completion of volume-regulatory responses. 3. During perfusion with isotonic media, addition of glutamine (3 mM) led to an increase of liver mass by about 4% within 2 min, which was accompanied by a net K+ uptake by the liver. Thereafter, the new steady state of increased liver mass was maintained throughout glutamine infusion. When the liver mass had reached this new steady state, a net release of K+ from the liver of about 3 mumol/g liver was observed during the following 10 min. Withdrawal of glutamine was followed by a slow reuptake of K+ and the liver mass returned to its initial value. Following exposure to glutamine (3 mM), the intracellular glutamine concentration (as calculated from glutamine tissue levels, taking into account the extracellular space determined with the [3H]inulin technique) rose from about 1 mM to 30-35 mM within about 12 min, indicating a 10-12-fold concentrative uptake of glutamine into the liver cells and an osmotic challenge for the hepatocyte. When intracellular glutamine had reached its steady-state concentration, net K+ efflux from the liver was also terminated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Volume-regulating behavior of human platelets   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Human platelets exposed to hypotonic media undergo an initial swelling followed by shrinking (regulatory volume decrease [RVD]). If the RVD is blocked, the degree of swelling is in accord with osmotic behavior. The cells could swell at least threefold without significant lysis. Two methods were used to follow the volume changes, electronic sizing and turbidimetry. Changes in shape produced only limited contribution to the measurements. The RVD was very rapid, essentially complete in 2 to 8 minutes, with a rate proportional to the degree of initial cell swelling. RVD involved a loss of KCl via volume-activated conductive permeability pathways for K+ and anions, presumably Cl-. In media containing greater than 50 mM KCl, the shrinking was inhibited and with higher concentrations was reversed (secondary swelling), suggesting that it is driven by the net gradient of K+ plus Cl-. The K+ pathway was specific for Rb+ and K+ compared to Li+ and Na+. The Cl- pathway accepted NO-3 and SCN- but not citrate or SO4(2-). In isotonic medium, the permeability of platelets to Cl- appeared to be low compared to that of K+. After hypotonic swelling both permeabilities were increased, but the Cl- permeability exceeded that of K+. The Cl- conductive pathway remained open as long as the cells were swollen. RVD was incomplete unless amiloride, an inhibitor of Na+/H+ exchange, was present or unless Na+ was replaced by an impermeant cation. In addition, acidification of the cytoplasm occurred upon cell swelling. This reduction in pHi appeared to activate Na+/H+ exchange, with a resultant uptake of Na+ and reduction in the rate and amount of shrinking. Like other cells, platelets responded to hypertonic shrinking with activation of Na+/H+ exchange, but regulatory volume increase was not detectable.  相似文献   

16.
Na+, K+, and Cl- transport in resting pancreatic acinar cells   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
To understand the role of Na+, K+, and Cl- transporters in fluid and electrolyte secretion by pancreatic acinar cells, we studied the relationship between them in resting and stimulated cells. Measurements of [Cl-]i in resting cells showed that in HCO3(-)-buffered medium [Cl- ]i and Cl- fluxes are dominated by the Cl-/HCO3- exchanger. In the absence of HCO3-, [Cl-]i is regulated by NaCl and NaK2Cl cotransport systems. Measurements of [Na+]i showed that the Na(+)-coupled Cl- transporters contributed to the regulation of [Na+]i, but the major Na+ influx pathway in resting pancreatic acinar cells is the Na+/H+ exchanger. 86Rb influx measurements revealed that > 95% of K+ influx is mediated by the Na+ pump and the NaK2Cl cotransporter. In resting cells, the two transporters appear to be coupled through [K+]i in that inhibition of either transporter had small effect on 86Rb uptake, but inhibition of both transporters largely prevented 86Rb uptake. Another form of coupling occurs between the Na+ influx transporters and the Na+ pump. Thus, inhibition of NaK2Cl cotransport increased Na+ influx by the Na+/H+ exchanger to fuel the Na+ pump. Similarly, inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange increased the activity of the NaK2Cl cotransporter. The combined measurements of [Na+]i and 86Rb influx indicate that the Na+/H+ exchanger contributes twice more than the NaK2Cl cotransporter and three times more than the NaCl cotransporter and a tetraethylammonium-sensitive channel to Na+ influx in resting cells. These findings were used to develop a model for the relationship between the transporters in resting pancreatic acinar cells.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
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   

19.
Exposure of HTC rat hepatoma cells to a 33% decrease in extracellular osmolality caused the cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) to increase transiently by approximately 90 nm. This rise in [Ca(2+)](i) was inhibited strongly by apyrase, grade VII (which has a low ATP/ADPase ratio) but not by apyrase grade VI (which has a high ATP/ADPase ratio) or hexokinase, indicating that extracellular ADP and/or ATP play a role in the [Ca(2+)](i) increase. The hypotonically induced rise in [Ca(2+)](i) was prevented by the prior discharge of the intracellular Ca(2+) store of the cells by thapsigargin. Removal of extracellular Ca(2+) or inhibition of Ca(2+) influx by 1-10 microm Gd(3+) depleted the thapsigargin-sensitive Ca(2+) stores and thereby diminished the rise in [Ca(2+)](i). The hypotonically induced rise in [Ca(2+)](i) was prevented by adenosine 2'-phosphate-5'-phosphate (A2P5P) and pyridoxyl-5'-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulfonate, inhibitors of purinergic P2Y(1) receptors for which ADP is a major agonist. Both inhibitors also blocked the rise in [Ca(2+)](i) elicited by addition of ADP to cells in isotonic medium, whereas A2P5P had no effect on the rise in [Ca(2+)](i) elicited by the addition of the P2Y(2) and P2Y(4) receptor agonist, UTP. HTC cells were shown to express mRNA encoding for rat P2Y(1), P2Y(2), and P2Y(6) receptors. Inhibition of the hypotonically induced rise in [Ca(2+)](i) blocked hypotonically induced K(+) ((86)Rb(+)) efflux, modulated the hypotonically induced efflux of taurine, but had no significant effect on Cl(-) ((125)I-) efflux. The interaction of extracellular ATP and/or ADP with P2Y(1) purinergic receptors therefore plays a role in the response of HTC cells to osmotic swelling but does not account for activation of all the efflux pathways involved in the volume-regulatory response.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The stimulatory effects of two thiol (SH) group oxidants, methylmethane thiosulfonate (MMTS) and diazene dicarboxylic acid bis [N,N-dimethylamide] (diamide), on the kinetics of ouabain-resistant (OR) K:Cl [co]-transport in low K (LK) sheep red blood cells were compared with the effects of alkylating agents, notably N-ethylmaleimide (NEM). At low concentrations, both MMTS and diamide stimulated K:CI [co]-transportv and with a latency period, as measured by OR zero-trans K efflux and OR uptake of external Rb, Rbo, as K congener in Cl and NO3 media. At high concentrations the effect of diamide saturated, and that of MMTS disappeared. The stimulatory effect of MMTS was partially reversed by the reducing agent dithiothreitol (DTT) known to fully restore the diamide-activated K flux (Lauf, J. Memb. Biol. 101:179–188, 1988). In diamide pre-equilibrated LK sheep red cells, the Km of K:Cl [co]-transport for external Cl, Clo, was 84.3 mM, and 18.7 mM for Rbo, with nearly identical Vmax values around 4 mmol Rb/L cells × h for K (Rb) fluxes in Cl and after correction for the small Cl-independent component. Zero net K (Rb) flux existed at Kc (cell K)/Rbo concentration ratios, [K]c/[Rb]c, of 0.8 i.e. when the electrochemical driving forces across the membrane were about equal. The measured K efflux/Rb influx ratios were almost twice those predicted from [K]c/[Rb]o and the Cl equilibrium potential suggesting that the diamide-stimulated K (Rb) flux may occur through non-diffusional, carrier-mediated transport. The effects of NEM and of A23187 plus/minus Ca or chelators on K: [co]Cl-transport (Lauf, Am. J. Physiol. 249:C271–278, 1985) consisted primarily of Vmax changes. Thus, all chemical interventions resulted in an increase of the number of actively transporting K:Cl [co]-transport units or an augmented turnover number per existing site.  相似文献   

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