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1.
Effects of the Ca2+-ionophore A23187 and concanavalin A on the membrane potential of human lymphocytes and rat thymocytes have been studied using the fluorescent potential probe diS-C3-(5). At concentrations of 10(-8) to 10(-6) M A23187 changes the membrane potential, inducing both hyper- and depolarization. Depending on concentrations of A23187 and the external Ca2+, and on the type of lymphocytes, one of these effects predominates. The hyperpolarization induced by A23187 is caused by activation of Ca2+-dependent K+ channels. It is blocked by quinine and high concentrations of extracellular K+. The dependence of Ca2+-activated K+ transport on extracellular Ca2+ and its sensitivity to calmodulin antagonists is different for human lymphocytes and for thymocytes. As distinct from lymphocytes, in thymocytes calmodulin is not involved in activation of Ca2+-dependent K+ transport. The depolarization induced in lymphocytes by A23187 is caused by an increase in Na+ permeability of the lymphocyte plasma membrane: it is eliminated in a low-Na+ medium. At mitogenic concentrations concanavalin A does not change the membrane potential of the lymphocytes. The results obtained permit elucidation of the relationship between two early events in lymphocyte activation, namely the increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration and the increase in lymphocyte plasma membrane permeabilities to monovalent cations.  相似文献   

2.
Interaction of some mitogenic lectins and growth factors with the cell surface leads to activation of the Na+/H+ antiport and a resultant cytoplasmic alkalinization. Because amiloride inhibits both Na+/H+ exchange and cell proliferation, it has been hypothesized that activation of the antiport is an obligatory requirement and may, perhaps, be the "trigger" for proliferation. However, concentrations of amiloride which inhibit the antiport also inhibit several other intracellular processes, including protein synthesis and phosphorylation. To determine whether activation of the Na+/H+ antiport is necessary for lectin-induced proliferation, we examined the inhibitory activity of a series of potent amiloride analogs by measuring [3H]thymidine incorporation, cell cycle progression, and induction of the interleukin 2 (IL 2) receptor on human lymphocytes. In medium containing bicarbonate, and at concentrations at least 10 times higher than required to inhibit the antiport, these drugs did not inhibit the proliferative response of human peripheral blood T cells to the mitogen phytohemagglutinin. The amiloride analogs also failed to inhibit induction of the IL 2 receptor. Similarly, with human thymocytes, the amiloride analogs did not inhibit the co-mitogenic effects of the lectins phytohemagglutinin and concanavalin A together with IL 2 or the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. This finding suggests that Na+/H+ exchange through the antiport is not an obligatory requirement for activation or proliferation of human lymphocytes or thymocytes.  相似文献   

3.
Rat cortical synaptosomes responded to a reduction of external Ca2+ from pCa 3.5 to pCa 4.8 in the absence of MgCl2 with a slight decrease of internal K+ and an increase of Na+. The effects were prevented by tetrodotoxin or millimolar concentrations of MgCl2. Further lowering of external pCa to 7.7 with N-hydroxyethylethylenediaminetriacetate evoked a rapid fall of internal K+, which was specifically blocked by Ruthenium Red; tetrodotoxin and nifedipine were ineffective. A linear relationship was established between K+ and methyltriphenylphosphonium cation distribution ratios by varying external pCa between 4.8 and 7.7, indicating that K+ efflux resulted from a depolarization of the plasma membrane. An increase of Na+ permeability was suggested by the synaptosomes' gain of Na+ and the disappearance of the depolarization in an Na+-free sucrose medium. According to the constant field equation, the permeability ratio PNa/PK increased from 0.029 at pCa4.8 to 0.090 at pCa 7.7 with plasma membrane potentials of -74mV and -47mV, respectively. Since the plasma membrane responded to variation of external Ca2+ activities in the micromolar range with a graded and sustained depolarization, the use of Ca2+ buffers to control membrane potentials is suggested.  相似文献   

4.
The verapamil-sensitive Ca2+ channel in the synaptosomal plasma membrane is investigated. Verapamil is without effect on Ca2+ uptake or steady-state content in synaptosomes with a polarized plasma membrane, but completely inhibits the additional Ca2+ uptake following plasma-membrane depolarization by high [K+], by veratridine plus ouabain or by high concentrations of the permeant cation tetraphenylphosphonium. Verapamil-insensitive Ca2+ influx and steady-state content are identical in polarized and depolarized synaptosomes, even though the Na+ electrochemical potential is greatly decreased in the latter, indicating that Na+/Ca2+ exchange is not a significant mechanism for Ca2+ efflux under these conditions. A transient Na+-dependent Ca2+ efflux can only be observed on addition of Na+ to Na+-depleted depolarized synaptosomes. While 0.2 mM verapamil decreases the ate of 86Rb+ efflux and 22Na+ entry during depolarization induced by veratridine plus ouabain, the final steady-state Na+ accumulation is not inhibited. Ca2+ efflux from synaptosomes following mitochondrial depolarization does not occur by a verapamil-sensitive pathway.  相似文献   

5.
We have prepared human blood lymphocyte membrane vesicles of high purity in sufficient quantity for detailed enzyme analysis. This was made possible by the use of plateletpheresis residues, which contain human lymphocytes in amounts equivalent to thousands of milliliters of blood. The substrate specificity and the kinetics of the cofactor and substrate requirements of the human lymphocyte membrane Na+, K+-ATPase activity were characterized. The Na+, K+-ATPase did not hydrolyze ADP, AMP, ITP, UTP, GTP or TTP. The mean ATPase stimulated by optimal concentrations of Na+ and K+ (Na+, K+-ATPase) was 1.5 nmol of P(i) hydrolyzed, microgram protein-1, 30 min-1 (range 0.9-2.1). This activity was completely inhibited by the cardiac glycoside, ouabain. The K(m) for K+ was approximately 1.0 mM and the K(m) for Na+ was approximately 15 mM. Active Na+ and K+ transport and ouabain-sensitive ATP production increase when lymphocytes are stimulated by PHA. Na+, K+-ATPase activity must increase also to transduce energy for the transport of Na+ and K+. Some studies have reported that PHA stimulates the lymphocyte membrane ATPase directly. We did not observe stimulation of the membrane Na+, K+-ATPase when either lymphocytes or lymphocyte membranes were treated with mitogenic concentrations of PHA. Moreover, PHA did not enhance the reaction velocity of the Na+, K+-ATPase when studied at the K(m) for ATP, Na+, K+ OR Mg++, indicating that it does not alter the affinity of the enzyme for its substrate or cofactors. Thus, our data indicate that the increase in ATPase activity does not occur as a direct result of PHA action on the cell membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Captopril has been reported to inhibit ouabain-sensitive Na+/K+-ATPase activity in erythrocyte membrane fragments. We investigated the effect of captopril on two physiological measures of Na+/K+ pump activity: 22Na+ efflux from human erythrocytes and K+-induced relaxation of rat tail artery segments. Captopril inhibited 22Na+ efflux from erythrocytes in a concentration-dependent fashion, with 50% inhibition of total 22Na+ efflux at a concentration of 4.8 X 10(-3) M. The inhibition produced by captopril (5 X 10(-3) M) and ouabain (10(-4) M) was not greater than that produced by ouabain alone (65.3 vs. 66.9%, respectively), and captopril inhibited 50% of ouabain-sensitive 22Na+ efflux at a concentration of 2.0 X 10(-3) M. Inhibition by captopril of ouabain-sensitive 22Na efflux was not explained by changes in intracellular sodium concentration, inhibition of angiotensin-converting enzyme or a sulfhydryl effect. Utilizing rat tail arteries pre-contracted with norepinephrine (NE) or serotonin (5HT) in K+-free solutions, we demonstrated dose-related inhibition of K+-induced relaxation by captopril (10(-6) to 10(-4) M). Concentrations above 10(-4) M did not significantly inhibit K+-induced relaxation but did decrease contractile responses to NE, although not to 5HT. Inhibition of K+-induced relaxation by captopril was not affected by saralasin, teprotide or indomethacin. We conclude that captopril can inhibit membrane Na+/K+-ATPase in intact red blood cells and vascular smooth muscle cells. The mechanism of pump suppression is uncertain, but inhibition of ATPase should be considered when high concentrations of captopril are employed in physiological studies.  相似文献   

7.
Recent frog-muscle studies produced the following findings: 1. Contrary to the theory of K+--Na+ coupled pump, reduction of external K+ concentration to near zero did not significantly reduce the rate of efflus of the fraction of cell Na+ conventionally regarded as rate-limited by membrane permeability. 2. Reduction of external K+ concentration profoundly reduced the rate of the efflux of this fraction only if the muscles were exposed to the low K+ while being loaded with radioactive Na+. 3. The data indicate that the fraction of Na+ efflux which in normal cells at room temperature has a half-time exchange (t1/2) of 20-40 min is not rate-limited by membrane permeability but by desorption from cellular adsorption sites. Surface-limited Na+ exchange between free Na+ in the cell and the external environment is represented by a faster fraction with a t1/2 of 2 to 4 min. 4. The data further indicate that the slow-down of the rate of efflux of the (slow) fraction arises from a cooperative shift of those beta- and gamma-carboxyl groups from adsorbing K+ to adsorbing Na+ when external K+ concentration is reduced below a critical level. The enhanced adsorption energy of the newly adsorbed Na+ raises the activation energy, hence a slower rate of exchange is seen as a slow-down in the "efflux curves." It is therefore only when free labeled Na+ is present in the cell water and thus available to the newly emerging Na+ adsorption sites that the effect of low external K+ can be visualized in a labeled-Na+ efflux study. Application of low K+ Ringer's solution after free labeled Na+ in and out of the cells has been washed away only causes enhanced adsorption of non-labeled Na+, which is not detected in isotope efflux study.  相似文献   

8.
Cell swelling and elevated intracellular Ca2+ increase K+ permeability in lymphocytes. Experiments were performed to test whether these effects can also be elicited in isolated plasma membrane vesicles. Rabbit thymocytes, used as a source of membrane vesicles, were found to regain their volume after swelling in hypotonic, low-K+ media. This regulatory volume decrease (RVD) was inhibited by quinine and trifluoperazine, but not affected by ouabain. Both efflux and uptake of K+ (86Rb) were stimulated by hypotonicity. Addition of A23187 plus Ca2+ also increased 86Rb fluxes. Ca2+- and volume-induced 86Rb fluxes were also studied in isolated membranes. A plasma membrane-rich vesicle fraction, enriched over 11-fold in 5'-nucleotidase, was isolated from thymocytes. The vesicles were about 35% inside-out and trapped 86Rb in an osmotically active compartment of approximately 1.3 microliter/mg protein. Equilibrium exchange fluxes of 86Rb in the vesicles were unaffected by Ca2+ with or without A23187. Calmodulin had no effect on 86Rb permeability but stimulated ATP-dependent Ca2+ accumulation. Hypotonic swelling increased both uptake and efflux of 86Rb from vesicles. However, this increase was not blocked by either quinine or trifluoperazine, was not specific for K+ (86Rb), and is probably unrelated to RVD. It is concluded that components essential for the volume- and Ca2+-induced changes in K+ permeability are lost or inactivated during membrane isolation. An intact cytoarchitecture may be required for RVD.  相似文献   

9.
Sea urchin sperm motility can be activated by alkalinization of the internal pH, and previous studies have shown that the internal pH can be regulated by a voltage-sensitive Na+/H+ exchanger present in the flagellar plasma membrane. In this study, the effects of speract, a peptide purified from egg conditioned media, on the Na+/H+ exchange were investigated. Evidence presented indicates that speract activates K+ channels in the flagellar membrane and modulates the Na+/H+ exchange activity through resultant changes in membrane potential. In the presence of tetraphenylphosphonium, a lipophilic ion, or high external Na+, the isolated flagella were depolarized, and Na+/H+ exchanger was inhibited. Speract and valinomycin, a K+ ionophore, were able to reactivate 22Na+ uptake, H+ efflux, and alkalinization of intraflagellar pH under either of the depolarizing conditions. Membrane potential measurements using 3,3'-dipropylthiodicarbocyanide iodide indicated repolarization by either speract or valinomycin. The speract-induced voltage changes did not require Na+ but were sensitive to [K+]. Thus, speract induced a slight depolarization in Na+-free seawater with 10 mM K+ but a hyperpolarization with 2 mM K+. Further support for the activation of K+ channels in the flagella was the 2-5-fold stimulation of K+ efflux induced by speract as measured with a K+ electrode. The ionic selectivity of the speract-activated channel assessed by voltage measurements was K+ greater than Rb+ greater than Cs+. The half-maximally effective concentration of speract was about 0.2 nM. That the H+ and K+ efflux in response to peptide was receptor-mediated was confirmed by the use of speract or resact on intact sea urchin spermatozoa, where the peptides were found to stimulate K+ efflux and to reverse the tetraphenylphosphonium inhibition on H+ efflux only in the homologous spermatozoa. Modulation of the voltage-sensitive Na+/H+ exchange by egg peptides, therefore, appears to be indirect and is coupled through its action on membrane potential.  相似文献   

10.
Propranolol, in the presence of calcium, causes marked K efflux from human red blood cells (high K, low Na). The studies reported here indicate this effect of propranolol is specific for K and does not represent a nonspecific permeability increase for intracellular cations to leave the cell. Amphotericin-treated human RBC's (high Na, low K) and dog RBC's (high Na, low K) both gain K and increase in size when incubated in a K-medium containing propranolol and calcium. No effect was noted when cat RBC's (high Na, low K) were similarly treated. Propranolol, independent of added calcium, also inhibited the normally increased Na efflux observed when dog RBC's are suspended in K-medium. These species differences in response to propranolol thus may serve as a focus for elucidating the mechanism by which this drug alters normal membrane physiology. The unique drug effect on Na permeability of canine erythrocytes also may be a useful probe for the study of dog RBC volume regulation.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the effects of mitogenic lectins on human T-lymphocytes, isolated from peripheral blood, and cells from the T-cell clone, HPB-ALL, using the fluorescent dyes, bis-thiobarbiturate tri-methineoxonol (bisoxonol) and quin2 to sense changes in membrane potential and intracellular free [Ca2+], respectively. The resting potential of both cell types is close to the K+ equilibrium potential. Changes from the resting level occur when mitogenic concentrations of either concanavalin A or phytohaemagglutinin are added. T-lymphocytes undergo a decrease in emission, maximal at 1 to 2 min, corresponding to a small membrane hyperpolarization. This is followed by a depolarization to approximately the resting level. HPB-ALL cells, on the other hand, respond to the mitogens by a sustained increase in fluorescence, denoting a depolarization, that is maximal at 4 to 5 min and 7 to 9 min, respectively. The Ca2+-dependence of these phenomena indicates that the membrane potential response, in both cell types, is the resultant of two opposing effects: a Ca2+-sensitive ion movement tending to hyperpolarize the cells and a Ca2+-insensitive effect that generates a depolarization. Our results suggest that Ca2+-activated K+ channels are responsible for the first effect and that an inward Na+ movement accounts for the depolarization signal in T-lymphocytes. In HPB-ALL cells only part of the depolarization is Na+-dependent. Although the effects elicited by phytohaemagglutinin occur more slowly than those produced by concanavalin A, similar membrane potential and [Ca2+]i changes occur.  相似文献   

12.
Neurotoxins which modify the gating system of the Na+ channel in neuroblastoma cells and increase the initial rate of 22Na+ influx through this channel also give rise to the efflux of 86Rb+ and 42K+. These effluxes are inhibited by tetrodotoxin and are dependent on the presence in the extracellular medium of cations permeable to the Na+ channel. These stimulated effluxes are not due to membrane depolarization or increases in the intracellular content of Na+ and Ca2+ which occur subsequent to the action of neurotoxins. The relationships of 22Na+ influx and 42K+ (or 86Rb+) effluxes to both the concentration of neurotoxins and the concentration of external permeant cations strongly suggest that the open form of the Na+ channel stabilized by neurotoxins permits an efflux of K+ ions. Our results indicate that for the efflux of each K+ ion there is a corresponding influx of two Na+ ions into the Na+ channel.  相似文献   

13.
1. We have monitored the plasma-membrane potential of lymphocytes by measuring the accumulation of the lipophilic cation methyltriphenylphosphonium (TPMP+) in the presence of the uncoupler carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP). 2. The mitogen concanavalin A causes a decrease in TPMP+ accumulation by pig lymphocytes corresponding to a 3 mV depolarization with 2 1/2 min. Concanavalin A does not alter 86Rb+ uptake in the first 30 min. 3. In contrast concanavalin A increased TPMP+ accumulation and the rate of Rb+ uptake in mouse thymocytes. This is consistent with a previous proposal that the mitogen induces a hyperpolarization of mouse thymocytes as a result of stimulation of a Ca2+-dependent K+ channel. 4. Studies with the calcium ionophore A23187 and quinine (an inhibitor of the Ca2+-dependent K+ channel) suggest that the channel is partially closed in mouse resting thymocytes but is almost fully active in pig resting cells. Thus concanavalin A hyperpolarizes mouse thymocytes by activating the Ca2+-dependent K+ channel but cannot do so in pig lymphocytes because the channel is already maximally activated. 5. The 3mV depolarization of pig cells cannot be explained by a decrease in electrogenic K+ permeability.  相似文献   

14.
1. Efflux of K+ was measured in pre-loaded (86Rb+) chicken enterocytes incubated in buffers with external K+ concentration ([K+]0) between 1 and 40 mM. 2. A decrease in [K+]0 from 6 to 1 mM reduced the rate constant of K+ efflux, whereas it was stimulated by increasing [K+]0 from 6 to 40 mM. 3. The inhibitory effect of low [K+]0 on K+ efflux was: (i) higher than that expected from a change in the electrical driving force, suggesting that membrane K+ permeability has been decreased, and (ii) attenuated by A23187 and Na(+)-free buffers. 4. The effect of A23187 on K(+)-induced K+ efflux was abolished by apamin and that of Na(+)-free buffers by apamin, quinine or verapamil, which suggests that the effect of low K+ on K+ efflux seems to be due to decreased intracellular Ca2+ concentration. 5. The stimulatory effect of 40 mM K0+ on K+ exit can be accounted for by an increase in the electrical driving force. 6. The efflux of K+ at 40 mM K0 appears to occur through Ca2(+)-activated K+ channels (KCa) since it was prevented by 500 microM quinine and unaffected by bumetanide or 3,4-diaminopyridine. 7. In addition, the current results show that an increase in external K+ concentration reduced the ability of quinine to inhibit KCa channels, and even abolished that of Ba2+ and apamin.  相似文献   

15.
Human blood T-lymphocytes increase their potassium (K+) permeability and active K+ transport following lectin or antigen stimulation. We have studied the permeability and active transport of K+ by lymphocytes in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) to determine if their membrane K+ transport was similar to resting or lectin-stimulated normal blood lymphocytes. K+ transport was assessed both by the rate of isotopic 42K+ uptake and by the rate of change in cell K+ concentration after inhibition of the K+ transport system with ouabain. CLL lymphocytes had a marked decrease in membrane K+ permeability and active transport of K+ when compared to blood T lymphocytes. K+ transport in five subjects with CLL (10 mmol.1 cell water-1.h-1) was half that in normal blood T-lymphocytes (20 mmol.1 cell water-1 h-1). Phytohemagglutinin (PHA) treatment of CLL lymphocytes did not increase significantly their active K+ transport, whereas K+ transport by normal T-lymphocytes increased by 100%. Since there were 73% T-lymphocytes in normal blood and 14% in CLL blood, the difference in membrane K+ turnover could be related either to neoplasia or to the proposed B-lymphocyte origin of CLL. We studied human tonsillar lymphocytes which contained a mean of 34% T-cells. In five studies of tonsils, K+ transport was 14 mmol.1 cell water-1.h-1 and treatment with PHA increased K+ transport only 30%. The intermediate values of basal K+ transport and K+ transport in response to PHA in tonsillar lymphocytes were consistent with the proportion of T-lymphocytes present. These data suggest that B-lymphocytes have reduced membrane permeability and active transport of K+. Thus the marked decrease in CLL lymphocyte membrane K+ permeability and transport may be a reflection of its presumed B-cell origin, rather than a membrane alteration related to malignant transformation.  相似文献   

16.
The exposure of human fibroblasts to hypotonic medium (200 mosmolal) evoked the activation of both 36Cl- influx and efflux, which were insensitive to inhibitors of the anion exchanger and of the anion/cation cotransport, and conversely were inhibited by the Cl(-)-channel blocker 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)benzoic acid (NPPB). 36Cl- efflux was linked to a parallel efflux of 86Rb+; thus conductive K+ and Cl- pathways are activated during volume regulation in human fibroblasts. This conclusion is supported by evidence that, in hypotonic medium, 36Cl- influx and 86Rb+ efflux were both enhanced by depolarization of the plasma membrane. Depletion of the intracellular K+ content, obtained by preincubation with the ionophore gramicidin in Na(+)-free medium, had no effect on Cl- efflux in hypotonic medium. This result has been interpreted as evidence for independent activation of K+ and Cl- pathways. It is also concluded that the anion permeability is the rate-limiting factor in the response of human fibroblasts to hypotonic stress.  相似文献   

17.
Although cytosolic Ca2+ transients are known to influence the magnitude and duration of hormone and neurotransmitter release, the processes regulating the decay of such transients after cell stimulation are not well understood. Na(+)-dependent Ca2+ efflux across the secretory vesicle membrane, following its incorporation into the plasma membrane, may play a significant role in Ca2+ efflux after stimulation of secretion. We have measured an enhanced 45Ca2+ efflux from cultured bovine adrenal chromaffin cells following cell stimulation with depolarizing medium (75 mM K+) or nicotine (10 microM). Such stimulation also causes Ca2+ uptake via voltage-gated Ca2+ channels and secretion of catecholamines. Na+ replacement with any of several substitutes (N-methyl-glucamine, Li+, choline, or sucrose) during cell stimulation inhibited the enhanced 45Ca2+ efflux, indicating and Na(+)-dependent Ca2+ efflux process. Na+ deprivation did not inhibit 45Ca2+ uptake or catecholamine secretion evoked by elevated K+. Suppression of exocytotic incorporation of secretory vesicle membranes into the plasma membrane with hypertonic medium (620 mOsm) or by lowering temperature to 12 degrees C inhibited K(+)-stimulated 45Ca2+ efflux in Na(+)-containing medium but did not inhibit the stimulated 45Ca2+ uptake. Enhancement of exocytotic secretion with pertussis toxin resulted in an enhanced 45Ca2+ efflux without affecting calcium uptake. The combined results suggest that Na(+)-dependent Ca2+ efflux across secretory vesicle membranes, following their incorporation into the plasma membrane during exocytosis, plays a significant role in regulating calcium efflux and the decay of cytosolic Ca2+ in adrenal chromaffin cells and possibly in related secretory cells.  相似文献   

18.
Human peripheral blood lymphocytes regulate their volumes in hypotonic solutions. In hypotonic media in which Na+ is the predominant cation, an initial swelling phase is followed by a regulatory volume decrease (RVD) associated with a net loss of cellular K+. In media in which K+ is the predominant cation, the rapid initial swelling is followed by a slower second swelling phase. 86Rb+ fluxes increased during RVD and returned to normal when the original volume was approximately regained. Effects similar to those induced by hypotonic stress could also be produced by raising the intracellular Ca++ level. In isotonic, Ca++- containing media cells were found to shrink upon addition of the Ca++ ionophore A23187 in K+-free media, but to swell in K+-rich media. Exposure to Ca++ plus A23187 also increased 86Rb+ fluxes. Quinine (75 microM), an inhibitor of the Ca++-activated K+ pathway in other systems blocked RVD, the associated K+ loss, and the increase in 86Rb+ efflux. Quinine also inhibited the volume changes and the increased 86Rb fluxes induced by Ca++ plus ionophore. The calmodulin inhibitors trifluoperazine, pimozide and chlorpromazine blocked RVD as well as Ca++ plus A23187-induced volume changes. Trifluoperazine also prevented the increase in 86Rb+ fluxes and K+ loss induced by hypotonicity. Chlorpromazine sulfoxide, a relatively ineffective calmodulin antagonist, was considerably less potent as an inhibitor of RVD than chlorpromazine. It is suggested than an elevation in cytoplasmic [Ca++], triggered by cell swelling, increases the plasma membrane permeability to K+, the ensuing increased efflux of K+, associated anions, and osmotically obliged water, leading to cell shrinking (RVD).  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
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