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

2.
The effects of a phorol ester and a mitogenic lectin on the intracellular pH (pHi) of human T lymphocytes was investigated. In contrast to the cytoplasmic alkalinization induced by 12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate, an acidification was recorded in cells treated with phytohemagglutinin. This decrease in pHi was magnified in Na+-free medium or in the presence of amiloride analogues, suggesting that activation of Na+/H+ exchange partially counteracts the phytohemagglutinin-induced acidification. The decrease in pHi was dependent on a sustained increase in cytosolic free Ca2+ and could be mimicked by addition of the divalent cation ionophore, ionomycin. The elevation of cytosolic free Ca2+ leads to metabolic H+ (equivalent) generation with consequent cytoplasmic acidification, which in human T cells predominates over the concurrent activation of the Na+/H+ antiport. These findings argue against the notion that activation of Na+/H+ exchange is a signal for the initiation of proliferation.  相似文献   

3.
The influence of hypotonic swelling and hypertonic shrinking on cytosolic pH in synaptosomes was investigated. It was shown that decreasing the osmolarity of incubation medium to 230 mOsm leads to alkalization and increasing the osmolarity of incubation medium to 810 mOsm leads to acidification. Alkalization was inhibited by amiloride, indicating the involvement of the Na+/H+ exchanger. The acidification of cytosol upon hypertonic shrinking was insensitive, to amiloride and the inhibitor of Na+, K+, Cl- cotransport bumetanide. Thus, the Na+/H+ exchange in synaptosomes is activated by hypotonic swelling but not hypertonic shrinking, in contrast with erythrocytes and lymphocytes, which have been investigated earlier.  相似文献   

4.
Isolated human blood platelets, loaded with the pH-sensitive fluorescence dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein show cytoplasmic alkalinization upon stimulation with thrombin but acidification with ADP stimulation. In both cases a Na+/H+ exchange is activated. This can be revealed by the sensitivity of the induced pH changes to amiloride and to 5-N-(3-aminophenyl)amiloride (APA), known inhibitors of the Na+/H+ exchanger, and by a dependence on sodium in the external medium. ADP-induced platelet aggregation is not affected by omission of sodium from the external medium. Furthermore, aggregation is barely inhibited (less than 10%) by amiloride or APA at concentrations up to 50 microM while the Ki values in affecting the Na+/H+ exchange are 5.9 and 1.6 microM for amiloride and APA, respectively. Platelet aggregation is inhibited by amiloride or APA at concentrations higher than 50 microM, but this inhibition is apparently due to a secondary effect of the agents. It is concluded that platelet aggregation induced by ADP is not dependent on activation of Na+/H+ exchange.  相似文献   

5.
Rat pancreatic acini loaded with the pH sensitive fluorescent dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein were used to characterize intracellular pH (pHi) regulatory mechanisms in these cells. The acini were attached to cover slips and continuously perfused. In 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (HEPES)-buffered solutions recovery from acid load (H+ efflux) required extracellular Na+ (Na+out) and was blocked by amiloride. Likewise, H+ influx initiated by removal of Na+out was blocked by amiloride. Hence, in HEPES-buffered medium the major operative pHi regulatory mechanism is a Na+/H+ exchange. In HCO3(-)-buffered medium, amiloride only partially blocked recovery from acid load and acidification due to Na+out removal. The remaining fraction required Na+out, was inhibited by H2-4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfunic acid (H2DIDS) and was independent of C1-. Hence, a transporter with characteristics of a Na(+)-HCO3- cotransport exists in pancreatic acini. Measurement of pHi changes due to Na(+)-HCO3- cotransport, suggests that the transporter contributes to HCO3- efflux under physiological conditions. Changing the Cl- gradient across the plasma membrane of acini maintained in HCO3(-)-buffered solutions reveals the presence of an H2DIDS-sensitive, Na(+)-independent, Cl(-)-dependent, HCO3- transporter with characteristics of a Cl-/HCO3- exchanger. In pancreatic acini the exchanger transports HCO3- but not OH- and under physiological conditions functions to remove HCO3- from the cytosol. In summary, only the Na+/H+ exchanger is functional in HEPES-buffered medium to maintain pHi at 7.28 +/- 0.03. In the presence of 25 mM HCO3- at pHo of 7.4, all the transporters operate simultaneously to maintain a steady-state pHi of 7.13 +/- 0.04.  相似文献   

6.
The Na+/H+ exchange system is not the major mechanism that regulates the internal pH value (pHi) of chick cardiac cells in culture under normal physiological conditions in the absence of carbonate. In cardiac cells in which the internal pH has been lowered to 6.6-6.7, the Na+/H+ exchanger becomes the major mechanism to bring back pHi to normal values (pHi = 7.3). The blockade of the Na+/H+ exchange activity with an active amiloride derivative, ethylisopropylamiloride, prevents internal pH recovery. The internal pH dependence of the Na+/H+ exchanger activity has been carefully studied. The [H+]i-dependence is very cooperative. For an external pH of 7.4, the system is nearly completely inactive at pHi 7.8 and nearly completely active at pHi 6.9-7.0 with half-maximum activation at pHi = 7.35. The increased activity of the Na+/H+ exchange system which follows the acidification of the internal medium produces an activation of the (Na+,K+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

7.
The internal pH (pHi) of cytoplasts, derived from human neutrophils, falls 0.05 pH units upon activation of the superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase. The decrease in pHi is absent in diphenyleneiodonium-treated cytoplasts and therefore it is likely to arise directly from the activity of the oxidase. The addition of amiloride, to diminish the Na+/H+ exchanger, enhanced the extent of the internal acidification but not the initial rate. However the electroneutral Na+/H+ exchanger cannot be a contributor to H+ efflux to compensate for charge translocated by the oxidase. In the presence of Cd ions or valinomycin, phorbol-induced acidification of the cytosol was greatly increased, suggesting an inability to translocate the cytosolic H+ generated by an electrogenic oxidase. In the presence of both Cd and valinomycin the cytoplasts retained 0.8 H+ per O2-. generated. The rate of acidification of the external medium by stimulated cytoplasts is greatly reduced in the presence of Zn and valinomycin. Our results support the view that the plasma membrane of neutrophils contains Zn2+- or Cd2+-sensitive proton-conducting channels which maintain a stable membrane potential and pHi during the activity of the electrogenic NADPH oxidase.  相似文献   

8.
Triggering the CD3/TCR complex of T lymphocytes induces a rapid rise in cytosolic free calcium followed by a slowly declining plateau. The level of this plateau depends on external pH, the more alkalinized media leading to higher values. Neither a pH-dependent binding of mAb, nor a perturbation of internal pH can account for this effect. In a sodium-free medium, or in the presence of dimethylamiloride Ca2+, elevation is accompanied by an acidification of the cells; both of them depend, to the same extent, on external calcium concentration. TPA inhibits CD3-, but not ionomycin-induced Ca2+ and H+ raises, indicating that it acts more probably on Ca2+ influx, rather than on its efflux. These results suggest that intracellular calcium could be regulated by a Ca2+/H+ ATPase which drives H+ in and Ca2+ out. In the presence of external Na+, H+ should return to the medium by the Na+/H+ exchanger.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanisms underlying cytoplasmic pH (pHi) regulation in rat thymic lymphocytes were studied using trapped fluorescein derivatives as pHi indicators. Cells that were acid-loaded with nigericin in choline+ media recovered normal pHi upon addition of extracellular Na+ (Nao+). The cytoplasmic alkalinization was accompanied by medium acidification and an increase in cellular Na+ content and was probably mediated by a Nao+/Hi+ antiport. At normal [Na+]i, Nao+/Hi+ exchange was undetectable at pHi greater than or equal to 6.9 but was markedly stimulated by internal acidification. Absolute rates of H+ efflux could be calculated from the Nao+-induced delta pHi using a buffering capacity of 25 mmol X liter-1 X pH-1, measured by titration of intact cells with NH4+. At pHi = 6.3, pHo = 7.2, and [Na+]o = 140 mM, H+ extrusion reached 10 mmol X liter-1 X min-1. Nao+/Hi+ exchange was stimulated by internal Na+ depletion and inhibited by lowering pHo and by addition of amiloride (apparent Ki = 2.5 microM). Inhibition by amiloride was competitive with respect to Nao+. Hi+ could also exchange for Lio+, but not for K+, Rb+, Cs+, or choline+. Nao+/Hi+ countertransport has an apparent 1:1 stoichiometry and is electrically silent. However, a small secondary hyperpolarization follows recovery from acid-loading in Na+ media. This hyperpolarization is amiloride- and ouabain-sensitive and probably reflects activation of the electrogenic Na+-K+ pump. At normal Nai+ values, the Nao+/Hi+ antiport of thymocytes is ideally suited for the regulation of pHi. The system can also restore [Na+]i in Na+-depleted cells. In this instance the exchanger, in combination with the considerable cytoplasmic buffering power, will operate as a [Na+]i- regulatory mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
The regulation of intracellular pH (pHi) was monitored in a virus-transformed cell clone derived from bovine ciliary body exhibiting characteristics of pigmented ciliary epithelium. Data were obtained from confluent monolayers grown on plastic coverslips in nominally bicarbonate-free media using the pH-sensitive absorbance of 5- (and 6-) carboxy-4',5'-dimethylfluorescein. Under resting conditions, pHi averaged 6.98 +/- 0.01 (SEM; n = 57). When cells were acid loaded by briefly exposing them to Ringer containing NH4+ and then withdrawing the NH4+, pHi spontaneously regained its initial value. In the presence of 1 mM amiloride or in the absence of Na+, this process was blocked, indicating the involvement of an Na+/H+ exchanger in the regulation of pHi after an acid load. Removing Na+ during resting conditions decreased cytoplasmatic pH. This acidification could be slowed by amiloride, which is evidence for reversal of the Na+/H+ countertransport exchanging intracellular Na+ for extracellular protons. Application of 1 mM amiloride during steady state led to a slow acidification. Thus the Na+/H+ exchanger is operative during resting conditions extruding protons, derived from cellular metabolism, or from downhill leakage into the cell. Addition of Na+ to Na+ -depleted cells led to an alkalinization, which was sensitive to amiloride, with an IC50 of about 20 microM. This alkalinization was attributed to the Na+/H+ exchanger and exhibited saturation kinetics with increasing Na+ concentrations, with an apparent KM of 29.6 mM Na+. It is concluded that Na+/H+ exchange regulates pHi during steady state and after an acid load.  相似文献   

11.
The properties of the Na+/H+ exchange system in the glial cell lines C6 and NN were studied from 22Na+ uptake experiments and measurements of the internal pH (pHi) using intracellularly trapped biscarboxyethyl-carboxyfluorescein. In both cell types, the Na+/H+ exchanger is the major mechanism by which cells recover their pHi after an intracellular acidification. The exchanger is inhibited by amiloride and its derivatives. The pharmacological profile (ethylisopropylamiloride greater than amiloride greater than benzamil) is identical for the two cell lines. Both Na+ and Li+ can be exchanged for H+. Increasing the external pH increases the activity of the exchanger in the two cell lines. In NN cells the external pH dependence of the exchanger is independent of the pHi. In contrast, in C6 cells, changing the pHi value from 7.0 to 6.5 produces a pH shift of 0.6 pH units in the external pH dependence of the exchanger in the acidic range. Decreasing pHi activates the Na+/H+ exchanger in both cell lines. Increasing the osmolarity of the external medium with mannitol produces an activation of the exchanger in C6 cells, which leads to a cell alkalinization. Mannitol action on 22Na+ uptake and the pHi were not observed in the presence of amiloride derivatives. Mannitol produces a modification of the properties of interaction of the antiport with both internal and external H+. It shifts the pHi dependence of the system to the alkaline range and the external pH (pHo) dependence to the acidic range. It also suppresses the interdependence of pHi and pHo controls of the exchanger's activity. NN cells that possess an Na+/H+ exchange system with different properties do not respond to mannitol by an increased activity of the Na+/H+ exchanger. The action of mannitol on C6 cells is unlikely to be mediated by an activation of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

12.
Angiotensin II, a potent vasoconstrictor, is known to stimulate Ca2+ mobilization and Na+ influx in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC). The fact that the Na+/H+ exchange inhibitor, amiloride, blocks angiotensin II-stimulated Na+ influx and is itself a vasodilator suggests that Na+/H+ exchange may play a role in the angiotensin II-mediated effects on VSMC. We have used a pH-sensitive fluorescent dye to study Na+/H+ exchange in cultured rat aortic VSMC. Basal intracellular pH was 7.08 in physiological saline buffer. Angiotensin II stimulation caused an initial transient acidification, followed by a Na+-dependent alkalinization. Angiotensin II increased the rate of alkalinization with apparent threshold, half-maximal, and maximal effect of 0.01, 3, and 100 nM, respectively. Angiotensin II stimulation appeared to be mediated by a shift in the Km of the Na+/H+ exchanger for extracellular Na+. Since angiotensin II activates phospholipase C in VSMC, we tested the possibility that angiotensin II increased Na+/H+ exchange by activation of protein kinase C via stimulation of diacylglycerol formation. The phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), stimulated Na+/H+ exchange in VSMC cultured for 24 h in serum-free medium, and the subsequent angiotensin II response was inhibited. However, VSMC grown in serum and treated for 24 h with TPA to decrease protein kinase C activity showed no inhibition of angiotensin II-stimulated Na+/H+ exchange. TPA caused no intracellular alkalinization of VSMC grown in serum, while the angiotensin II response was actually enhanced compared to VSMC deprived of serum for 24 h. We conclude that angiotensin II stimulates an amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchange system in cultured VSMC which is mediated by protein kinase C-dependent and -independent mechanisms. Angiotensin II-mediated Na+ influx and intracellular alkalinization may play a role in excitation-response coupling in vascular smooth muscle.  相似文献   

13.
The regulation of intracellular pH (pHi) in rat sublingual mucous acini was monitored using dual-wavelength microfluorometry of the pH-sensitive dye BCECF (2',7'-biscarboxyethyl-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein). Acini attached to coverslips and continuously superfused with HCO3(-)-containing medium (25 mM NaHCO3/5% CO2; pH 7.4) have a steady-state pHi of 7.25 +/- 0.02. Acid loading of acinar cells using the NH4+/NH3 prepulse technique resulted in a Na(+)-dependent, MIBA-inhibitable (5-(N-methyl-N-isobutyl) amiloride, Ki approximately 0.42 microM) pHi recovery, the kinetics of which were not influenced by the absence of extracellular Cl-. The rate and magnitude of the pHi recovery were dependent on the extracellular Na+ concentration, indicating that Na+/H+ exchange plays a critical role in maintaining pHi above the pH predicted for electrochemical equilibrium. When the NH4+/NH3 concentration was varied, the rate of pHi recovery was enhanced as the extent of the intracellular acidification increased, demonstrating that the activity of the Na+/H+ exchanger is regulated by the concentration of intracellular protons. Switching BCECF-loaded acini to a Cl(-)-free medium did not significantly alter resting pHi, suggesting the absence of Cl-/HCO3- exchange activity. Muscarinic stimulation resulted in a rapid and sustained cytosolic acidification (t 1/2 < 30 sec; 0.16 +/- 0.02 pH unit), the magnitude of which was amplified greater than two-fold in the presence of MIBA (0.37 +/- 0.05 pH unit) or in the absence of extracellular Na+ (0.34 +/- 0.03 pH unit). The agonist-induced intracellular acidification was blunted in HCO3(-)-free media and was inhibited by DPC (diphenylamine-2-carboxylate), an anion channel blocker. In contrast, the acidification was not influenced by removal of extracellular Cl-. The Ca2+ ionophore, ionomycin, mimicked the effects of stimulation, whereas preloading acini with BAPTA (bis-(o-aminophenoxy)-ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetra-acetic acid) to chelate intracellular Ca2+ blocked the agonist-induced cytoplasmic acidification. The above results indicate that during muscarinic stimulation an intracellular acidification occurs which: (i) is partially buffered by increased Na+/H+ exchange activity; (ii) is most likely mediated by HCO3- efflux via an anion channel; and (iii) requires an increase in cytosolic free [Ca2+].  相似文献   

14.
Cytoplasmic pH (pHi) has been shown to be an important determinant of the activity of the NADPH oxidase in phagocytic cells. We hypothesized that a difference in pHi and/or its regulation existed between activated and resident macrophages (RES MOs) which might explain the increased NADPH oxidase activity observed in the former. The pHi of RES and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-elicited MOs was examined using the fluorescent dye BCECF. Resting pHi did not differ between resident (RES) and elicited (ELI) MOs (7.16 +/- 0.05 and 7.20 +/- 0.05, respectively). pHi recovery after intracellular acid loading was partially dependent on the presence of Na+ in the extracellular medium, and was partially inhibited by the Na+/H+ antiport inhibitor, amiloride. At comparable pHi, the rate of acid extrusion during recovery was not different in RES and ELI MOs (1.48 +/- 0.12 and 1.53 +/- 0.06 mM/min, respectively). In both RES and ELI MOs, approx. 40% of total pHi recovery was insensitive to amiloride and independent of extracellular Na+. In both RES and ELI MOs, stimulation with TPA resulted in a biphasic pHi response: an initial acidification followed by a sustained alkalinization to a new steady-state pHi. This alkalinization was Na(+)-dependent and amiloride-sensitive, consistent with a TPA-induced increase in Na+/H+ antiport activity. The new steady-state pHi attained after TPA stimulation was equivalent in RES and ELI MOs (7.28 +/- 0.04 and 7.31 +/- 0.06, respectively), indicating comparable stimulated Na+/H+ antiport activity. However, the initial acidification induced by TPA was greater in ELI than in RES MOs (0.18 +/- 0.02 vs. 0.06 +/- 0.02 pH unit, respectively, P less than 0.05). The specific NADPH oxidase inhibitor diphenylene iodonium (DPI) completely inhibited the respiratory burst but reduced the magnitude of this pHi reduction by only about 50%. This suggested that the TPA-induced pHi reduction was due in part to acid produced via the respiratory burst, and in part to other acid-generating pathways stimulated by TPA.  相似文献   

15.
A Na+/H+ exchanger is involved in the regulation of cytoplasmic pH and cellular volume in a variety of cells. Little is known about the molecular nature of this exchanger. The purpose of this study was to survey a variety of group-specific covalent reagents as potential inhibitors of the exchanger. Na+/H+ countertransport activity was assayed as the amiloride-sensitive rate of Na+-induced alkalinization in acid-loaded lymphocytes, or as the rate of swelling in cells suspended in sodium propionate medium. Activity was not affected by proteinases or by carboxyl-group and amino-group specific reagents. A significant inhibition was produced by diethylpyrocarbonate, a histidine-specific reagent and by N-ethylmaleimide, a sulfhydryl group reagent. A similarly reactive but nonpermeating sulfhydryl agent, glutathione-maleimide, failed to inhibit Na+-H+ exchange. Moreover, the reaction with N-ethylmaleimide was sensitive to changes in the cytoplasmic pH. The data suggest that the chemically reactive groups of the Na+/H+ exchanger of lymphocytes have limited exposure to the extracellular medium but that an internally located sulfhydryl group is critical for the cation-exchange activity.  相似文献   

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

17.
22Na+ flux and cytoplasmic pH (pHi) determinations were used to study the reversibility, symmetry, and mechanism of activation of the Na+/H+ exchange system in rat thymic lymphocytes. In acid-loaded cells, the antiport can be detected as an Na+-induced, amiloride-sensitive alkalinization. At pHi greater than or equal to 7.0, amiloride- sensitive net H+ fluxes are not detectable. To investigate whether at this pHi the transporter is operative in a different mode, e.g., Na+/Na+ exchange, 22Na+ uptake was measured as a function of pHi. The results indicate that the antiport is relatively inactive at pHi greater than or equal to 7.0. Comparison of the rates of H+ efflux (or equivalent OH- uptake) and Na+ uptake indicate that Na+/Na+ countertransport through this system is negligible at all values of pHi and that the Na+:H+ stoichiometry is 1:1. Measurements of pHi in Na+- loaded cells suspended in Na+-free medium revealed an amiloride- sensitive cytoplasmic acidification, which is indicative of exchange of internal Na+ for external H+. The symmetry of the system was analyzed by measuring the effect of extracellular pH (pHo) on Na+ efflux. Unlike cytoplasmic acidification, lowering pHo failed to activate the antiport. The results indicate that the amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchanger is reversible but asymmetric. The system is virtually inactive at pHi greater than or equal to 7.0 but can be activated by protonation of a modifier site on the cytoplasmic surface. Activation can also occur by depletion of cellular Na+. It is proposed that Na+ may also interact with the modifier site, stabilizing the unprotonated (inactive) form.  相似文献   

18.
Single smooth muscle cells were isolated from circular muscle of the canine gastric corpus by collagenase incubation. Cytoplasmic pH (pHi) of these cells was measured fluorometrically using the trapped dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein. Cells were examined for their Na+/H+ exchange activity after intracellular acidification. Cells acid-loaded by propionate exposure, the NH4+ prepulse technique or suspension in a Na+-depleted medium regained almost normal pHi upon exposure to a Na+ medium. The Na+-dependent alkalinization was amiloride sensitive. As well, addition of amiloride to cells suspended in a Na+ medium caused a concurrent decrease in pHi. The study indicates that a Na+/H+ antiport is present in these smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

19.
Pancreatic acini loaded with the pH-sensitive dye 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein were used to examine the effect of Ca2(+)-mobilizing agonists on the activity of acid-base transporters in these cells. In the accompanying article (Muallen, S., and Loessberg, P. A. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 12813-12819) we showed that in 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazine-ethanesulfonic acid (HEPES)-buffered medium the main pHi regulatory mechanism is the Na+/H+ exchanger, a while in HCO3(-)-buffered medium pHi is determined by the combined activities of a Na+/H+ exchanger, a Na(+)-HCO3- cotransporter and a Cl-/HCO3- exchanger. In this study we found that stimulation of acini with Ca2(+)-mobilizing agonists in HEPES or HCO3(-)-buffered media is followed by an initial acidification which is independent of any identified plasma membrane-located acid-base transporting mechanism, and thus may represent intracellularly produced acid. In HEPES-buffered medium there was a subsequent large alkalinization to pHi above that in resting cells, which could be attributed to the Na+/H+ exchanger. Measurements of the rate of recovery from acid load indicated that the Na+/H+ exchanger was stimulated by the agonists. In HCO3(-)-buffered medium the alkalinization observed after the initial acidification was greatly attenuated. Examination of the activity of each acid-base transporting mechanism in stimulated acini showed that in HCO3(-)-buffered medium: (a) recovery from acid load in the presence of H2-4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (H2DIDS) (Na+/H+ exchange) was stimulated similar to that found in HEPES-buffered medium; (b) recovery from acid load in the presence of amiloride and acidification due to removal of external Na+ in the presence of amiloride (HCO3- influx and efflux, respectively, by Na(+)-HCO3- cotransport) were inhibited; and (c) HCO3- influx and efflux due to Cl-/HCO3- exchange, which was measured by changing the Cl- or HCO3- gradients across the plasma membrane, were stimulated. Furthermore, the rate of Cl-/HCO3- exchange in stimulated acini was higher than the sum of H+ efflux due to Na+/H+ exchange and HCO3- influx due to Na(+)-HCO3- cotransport. Use of H2DIDS showed that the latter accounted for the attenuated changes in pHi in HCO3(-)-buffered medium, as much as treating the acini with H2DIDS resulted in similar agonist-mediated pHi changes in HEPES- and HCO3(-)-buffered media. The effect of agonists on the various acid-base transporting mechanisms is discussed in terms of their possible role in transcellular NaCl transport, cell volume regulation, and cell proliferation in pancreatic acini.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of elevating cytoplasmic Ca2+ [( Ca2+]i) on the intracellular pH (pHi) of thymic lymphocytes was investigated. In Na+-containing media, treatment of the cells with ionomycin, a divalent cation ionophore, induced a moderate cytoplasmic alkalinization. In the presence of amiloride or in Na+-free media, an acidification was observed. This acidification is at least partly due to H+ (equivalent) uptake in response to membrane hyperpolarization since: it was enhanced by pretreatment with conductive protonophores, it could be mimicked by valinomycin, and it was decreased by depolarization with K+ or gramicidin. In addition, activation of metabolic H+ production also contributes to the acidification. The alkalinization is due to Na+/H+ exchange inasmuch as it is Na+ dependent, amiloride sensitive, and accompanied by H+ efflux and net Na+ gain. A shift in the pHi dependence underlies the activation of the antiport. The effect of [Ca2+]i on Na+/H+ exchange was not associated with redistribution of protein kinase C and was also observed in cells previously depleted of this enzyme. Treatment with ionomycin induced significant cell shrinking. Prevention of shrinking largely eliminated the activation of the antiport. Moreover, a comparable shrinking produced by hypertonic media also activated the antiport. It is concluded that stimulation of Na+/H+ exchange by elevation of [Ca2+]i is due, at least in part, to cell shrinking and does not require stimulation of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

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