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1.
We have studied the interaction of physiological ligands other than Nai and Cai with the Ca pump and Na/Ca exchange in internally dialyzed squid axons. The results show the following. (a) Internal Mg2+ is an inhibitor of the Nao-dependent Ca efflux. At physiological Mg2+i (4 mM), the inhibition amounts to approximately 50%. The inhibition is partial and noncompetitive with Cai, and is not affected by Nai or ATP. The ATP-dependent uncoupled efflux is unaffected by Mgi up to 20 mM. Both components of the Ca efflux require Mg2+i for their activation by ATP. (b) At constant membrane potential, Ki is an important cofactor for the uncoupled Ca efflux. (c) Orthophosphate (Pi) activates the Nao-dependent Ca efflux without affecting the uncoupled component. Activation by Pi occurs only in the presence of Mg-ATP or hydrolyzable ATP analogues. Pi under physiological conditions has no effect on the uncoupled component; nevertheless, at alkaline pH, it inhibits the Ca pump, probably by product inhibition. (d) ADP is a potent inhibitor of the uncoupled Ca efflux. The Nao-dependent component is inhibited by ADP only at much higher ADP concentrations. These results indicate that (a) depending on the concentration of Ca2+i, Na+i Mg2+i, and Pi, the Na/Ca carrier can operate under a low- or high-rate regime; (b) the interactions of Mg2+i, Pi, Na+i, and ATP with the carrier are not interdependent; (c) the effect of Pi on the carrier-mediated Ca efflux resembles the stimulation of the Nao-dependent Ca efflux by internal vanadate; (d) the ligand effects on the uncoupled Ca efflux are of the type seen in the Ca pump in red cells and the sarcoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

2.
We have used dialyzed squid axons to characterize the ouabain- and bumetanide-insensitive Na efflux components and their relation to the operation of the Na/Ca exchange mechanism. In axons dialyzed with solutions containing nearly physiological concentrations of K, Na, and Mg, three components of the Na efflux can be distinguished: Cai-activated, Cao-dependent Na efflux ("reverse" Na/Ca exchange); Cai-activated, Nao-dependent Na efflux; and Cai-independent, ATP-activated, Nao-dependent Na efflux. We have studied the effects of internal alkalinization, Mgi, Cao, and the ATP analogue [gamma-thio]ATP (ATP gamma S) on the different components of the Na efflux. The results show the following: (a) internal alkalinization activates both Cao- and Nao-dependent Na efflux components provided that Cai is present; (b) Mgi inhibits both the Cai-activated, Cao- and Nao-dependent Na efflux components; (c) Cao inhibits the Nao-dependent component by competition for a common site; (d) ATP gamma S activates both Nao- and Cao-dependent Na efflux components only in the presence of Cai; and (e) ATP activates the Nai/Nao and Nai/Cao exchanges, causing a 10-fold increase in the affinity of the reverse Na/Ca exchange toward Cai. In the absence of Cai, ATP stimulates an Nao-dependent Na efflux that is not affected either by internal alkalinization or high Cao. The ATP analogue does not activate the Cai-independent Na/Na exchange system. These experiments demonstrate that the Cai-activated Na/Na exchange is a mode of operation of the Na/Ca exchange mechanism that substantially contributes to Na movement during the activation of the Na/Ca antiporter. The experimental evidence obtained on the Cai-independent Na/Na exchange component shows that this system is not part of the Na/Ca exchange.  相似文献   

3.
The influx and efflux of calcium (as 45Ca) and influx of sodium (as 24Na) were studied in internally dialyzed squid giant axons. The axons were poisoned with cyanide and ATP was omitted from the dialysis fluid. The internal ionized Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) was controlled with Ca-EGTA buffers. With [Ca2+]i greater than 0.5 muM, 45Ca efflux was largely dependent upon external Na and Ca. The Nao-dependent Ca efflux into Ca-free media appeared to saturate as [Ca2+]i was increased to 160 muM; the half-saturation concentration was about 8 muM Ca2+. In two experiments 24Na influx was measured; when [Ca2+]i was decreased from 160 muM to less than 0.5 muM, Na influx declined by about 5 pmoles/cm2 sec. The Nao-dependent Ca efflux averaged 1.6 pmoles/cm2 sec in axons with a [Ca2+]i of 160 muM, and was negligible in axons with a [Ca2+]i of less than 0.5 muM. Taken together, the Na influx and Ca efflux data may indicate that the fluxes are coupled with a stoichiometry of about 3 Na+-to-1 Ca2+. Ca efflux into Na-free media required the presence of both Ca and an alkali metal ion (but not Cs) in the external medium. Ca influx from Li-containing media was greatly reduced when [Ca2+]i was decreased from 160 to 0.23 muM, or when external Li was replaced by choline. These data provide evidence for a Ca-Ca exchange mechanism which is activated by certain alkali metal ions. The observations are consistent with a mobile carrier mechanism which can exchange Ca2+ ions from the axoplasm for either 3 Na+ ions, or one Ca2+ and an alkali metal ion (but not Cs) from the external medium. This mechanism may utilize energy from the Na electrochemical gradient to help extrude Ca against an electrochemical gradient.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium entry in squid axons during voltage clamp pulses   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Squid giant axons were injected with aequorin and tetraethylammonium and were impaled with sodium ion sensitive, current and voltage electrodes. The axons were usually bathed in a solution of varying Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]o) containing 150mM each of Na+, K+ and an inert cation such as Li+, Tris or N-methylglucamine and had ionic currents pharmacologically blocked. Voltage clamp pulses were repeatedly delivered to the extent necessary to induce a change in the aequorin light emission, a measure of axoplasmic Ca2+ level, [Ca2+]i. The effect of membrane voltage on [Ca2+]i was found to depend on the concentration of internal Na+ ([Na+]i). Voltage clamp hyperpolarizing pulses were found to cause a reduction of [Ca2+]i. For depolarizing pulses a relationship between [Ca2+]i gain and [Na+]i indicates that Ca2+ entry is sigmoid with a half maximal response at 22 mM Na+. This Ca2+ entry is a steep function of [Na+]i suggesting that 4 Na+ ions are required to promote the influx of 1 Ca2+. There was little change in Ca2+ entry with depolarizing pulses when [Ca2+]o is varied from 1 to 10mM, while at 50mM [Ca2+]o calcium entry clearly increases suggesting an alternate pathway from that of Na+/Ca2+ exchange. This entry of Ca2+ at high [Ca2+]o, however, was not blocked by Cs+o. The results obtained lend further support to the notion that Na+/Ca2+ exchange in squid giant axon is sensitive to membrane voltage no matter whether this is applied as a constant change in membrane potential or as an intermittent one.  相似文献   

5.
We used internally dialyzed squid axons to explore whether the reported activatory effect of Ca2+i on the partial reactions of the Na+-Ca2+ exchange (essential activator) is secondary to the presence of Ca2+ chelating agents in the internal medium. The effect of Ca2+i pulses on both the reverse (Ca2+o-dependent Na+ efflux) and Na+-Na+ exchange (Na+o-dependent Na+ efflux) modes of the Na+-Ca2+ exchange was studied in axons dialyzed without EGTA. For these experiments a substantial inhibition of the Ca2+ buffer capacity of the axoplasm was achieved by the use of Ruthenium red (10-20 microM), cyanide (1 mM) and vanadate (1 mM) in the dialysis solution. Our results indicate that the Ca2+i requirement of the reverse and Na+-Na+ exchange can not be explained by a direct inhibition of the Na+-Ca2+ exchanger by EGTA. In fact, both modes of operation of the exchanger can be activated by internal Ca2+ ions in the complete absence of Ca2+ chelating agents thus indicating that the 'catalytic' effect of Ca2+i on the Na+-Ca2+ exchanger is a real phenomenon.  相似文献   

6.
Squid giant axons were injected with aequorin and tetraethylammonium and were impaled with hydrogen ion sensitive, current and voltage electrodes. A newly designed horizontal microinjector was used to introduce the aequorin. It also served, simultaneously, as the current and voltage electrode for voltage clamping and as the reference for ion-sensitive microelectrode measurements. The axons were usually bathed in a solution containing 150 mM each of Na+, K+, and some inert cation, at either physiological or zero bath Ca2+ concentration [( Ca2+]o), and had ionic currents pharmacologically blocked. Voltage clamp pulses were repeatedly delivered to the extent necessary to induce a change in the aequorin light emission, a measure of axoplasmic ionized Ca2+ level, [( Ca2+]i). Alternatively, membrane potential was steadily held at values that represented deviations from the resting membrane potential observed at 150 mM [K+]o (i.e. approximately -15 mV). In the absence of [Ca2+]o a significant steady depolarization brought about by current flow increased [Ca2+]i (and acidified the axoplasm). Changes in internal hydrogen activity, [H+]i, induced by current flow from the internal Pt wire limited the extent to which valid measurements of [Ca2+]i could be made. However, there are effects on [Ca2+]i that can be ascribed to membrane potential. Thus, in the absence of [Ca2+]o, hyperpolarization can reduce [Ca2+]i, implying that a Ca2+ efflux mechanism is enhanced. It is also observed that [Ca2+]i is increased by depolarization. These results are consistent with the operation of an electrogenic mechanism that exchanges Na+ for Ca2+ in squid giant axon.  相似文献   

7.
The "late" Ca channel in squid axons   总被引:6,自引:3,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Squid giant axons were injected with aequorin and then treated with seawater containing 50 mM Ca and 100-465 mM K+. Measurements of light production suggested a phasic entry of Ca as well as an enhanced steady-state aequorin glow. After a test K+ depolarization, the aequorin-injected axon was stimulated for 30 min in Li seawater that was Ca-free, a procedure known to reduce [Na]i to about one-half the normal concentration. Reapplication of the elevated K+ test solution now showed that the Ca entry was virtually abolished by this stimulation in Li. A subsequent stimulation of the axon in Na seawater for 30 min resulted in recovery of the response to depolarization by high K+ noted in a normal fresh axon. In axons first tested for a high K+ response and then stimulated in Na seawater for 30 min (where [Na]i increases approximately 30%), there was approximately eight fold enhancement in this response to a test polarization. Axons depolarized with 465 mM K seawater in the absence of external Ca for several minutes were still capable of producing a large phasic entry of Ca when [Ca]0 was made 50 mM, which suggests that it is Ca entry itself rather than membrane depolarization that produced inactivation. Responses to stimulation at 60 pulses/s in Na seawater containing 50 mM Ca are at best only 5% of those measured with high K solutions. The response to repetitive stimulation is not measurable if [Ca]o is made 1 mM, whereas the response to steady depolarization is scarcely affected.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of external and internal K+ on Na+o-dependent Ca2+ efflux was studied in dialyzed squid axons under constant membrane potential. With axons clamped at their resting potentials, external K+ (up to 70 mM) has no effect on Na+-Ca2+ exchange. Removal of Ki+ causes a marked inhibition in the Na+o-dependent Ca2+ efflux component. Internal K+ activates the Na+-Ca2+ exchange with low affinity (K 1/2 = 90 mM). Activation by Ki+ is similar in the presence or in the absence of Na+i, thus ruling out a displacement of Na+i from its inhibitory site. Axons dialyzed with ATP also show a dependency of Ca2+ efflux on Ki+. The present results demonstrate that Ki+ is an important cofactor (partially required) for the proper functioning of the forward Na+-Ca2+ exchange.  相似文献   

9.
Plasma membrane vesicles from a glucose-responsive insulinoma exhibited properties consistent with the presence of a membrane Na+/Ca2+ exchange. The exchange was rapid, reversible, and was dependent on the external Ca2+ concentration (Km = 4.1 +/- 1.1 microM). External Na+ inhibited the uptake in a dose-dependent manner (IC50 = 15 mM). Dissipation of the Na+ gradient by 10 microM monensin decreased Na+/Ca2+ exchange from 0.74 +/- 0.17 nmoles/mg protein/s to 0.11 +/- 0.05 nmoles/mg protein/s. Exchange was not influenced by veratridine, tetrodotoxin and ouabain, or by modifiers of cAMP. No effect was seen using the calcium channel blockers, nitrendipine or nifedipine. Glucose had no direct effect on Na+/Ca2+ exchange, while glyceraldehyde, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate and dihydroxyacetone inhibited the exchange. Na+ induced efflux of calcium was seen in Ca2+ loaded vesicles and was half maximal at [Na+] of 11.1 +/- 0.75 mM. Ca2+ efflux was dependent on [Na+], with a Hill coefficient of 2.7 +/- 0.07 indicating that activation of Ca2+ release involves a minimum of three sites. The electrogenicity of this exchange was demonstrated using the lipophilic cation tetraphenylphosphonium [( 3H]-TPP), a membrane potential sensitive probe. [3H]-TPP uptake increased transiently during Na+/Ca2+ exchange indicating that the exchange generated a membrane potential. These results show that Na+/Ca2+ exchange operates in the beta cell and may be an important regulator of intracellular free Ca2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
We used microelectrodes to monitor the recovery (i.e., decrease) of intracellular pH (pHi) after using internal dialysis to load squid giant axons with alkali to pHi values of 7.7, 8.0, or 8.3. The dialysis fluid (DF) contained 400 mM K+ but was free of Na+ and Cl-. The artificial seawater (ASW) lacked Na+, K+, and Cl-, thereby eliminating effects of known acid-base transporters on pHi. Under these conditions, halting dialysis unmasked a slow pHi decrease caused at least in part by acid-base transport we refer to as "base efflux." Replacing K+ in the DF with either NMDG+ or TEA+ significantly reduced base efflux and made membrane voltage (Vm) more positive. Base efflux in K(+)-dialyzed axons was stimulated by decreasing the pH of the ASW (pHo) from 8 to 7, implicating transport of acid or base. Although postdialysis acidifications also occurred in axons in which we replaced the K+ in the DF with Li+, Na+, Rb+, or Cs+, only with Rb+ was base efflux stimulated by low pHo. Thus, the base effluxes supported by K+ and Rb+ appear to be unrelated mechanistically to those observed with Li+, Na+, or Cs+. The combination of 437 mM K+ and 12 mM HCO3- in the ASW, which eliminates the gradient favoring a hypothetical K+/HCO3- efflux, blocked pHi recovery in K(+)-dialyzed axons. However, the pHi recovery was not blocked by the combination of 437 mM Na+, veratridine, and CO2/HCO3- in the ASW, a treatment that inverts electrochemical gradients for H+ and HCO3- and would favor passive H+ and HCO3- fluxes that would have alkalinized the axon. Similarly, the recovery was not blocked by K+ alone or HCO3- alone in the ASW, nor was it inhibited by the K-H pump blocker Sch28080 nor by the Na-H exchange inhibitors amiloride and hexamethyleneamiloride. Our data suggest that a major component of base efflux in alkali-loaded axons cannot be explained by metabolism, a H+ or HCO3- conductance, or by a K-H exchanger. However, this component could be mediated by a novel K/HCO3- cotransporter.  相似文献   

11.
In microinjected Myxicola giant axons with elevated [Na]i, Na efflux was sensitive to Cao under some conditions. In Li seawater, sensitivity to Cao was high whereas in Na seawater, sensitivity to Cao was observed only upon elevation of [Ca]o above the normal value. In choline seawater, the sensitivity of Na efflux to Cao was less than that observed in Li seawater whereas Mg seawater failed to support any detectable Cao-sensitive Na efflux. Addition of Na to Li seawater was inhibitory to Cao-sensitive Na efflux, the extent of inhibition increasing with rising values of [Na]o. The presence of 20 mM K in Li seawater resulted in about a threefold increase in the Cao-activated Na efflux. Experiments in which the membrane potential, Vm, was varied or held constant when [K]o was changed showed that the augmentation of Ca- activated Na efflux by Ko was not due to changes in Vm but resulted from a direct action of K on activation by Ca. The same experimental conditions that favored a large component of Cao-activated Na efflux also caused a large increase in Ca influx. Measurements of Ca influx in the presence of 20 mM K and comparison with values of Ca-activated Na efflux suggest that the Na:Ca coupling ratio may be altered by increasing external [K]o. Overall, the results suggest that the Cao- activated Na efflux in Myxicola giant axons requires the presence of an external monovalent cation and that the order of effectiveness at a total monovalent cation concentration of 430 mM is K + Li greater than Li greater than Choline greater than Na.  相似文献   

12.
Squid axons display a high activity of Na+/Ca2+ exchange which is largely increased by the presence of external K+, Li+, Rb+ and NH+4. In this work we have investigated whether this effect is associated with the cotransport of the monovalent cation along with Ca2+ ions. 86Rb+ influx and efflux have been measured in dialyzed squid axons during the activation (presence of Ca2+i) of Ca2+o/Na+i and Ca2+i/Ca2+o exchanges, while 86Rb+ uptake was determined in squid optic nerve membrane vesicles under equilibrium Ca2+/Ca2+ exchange conditions. Our results show that although K+o significantly increases Na+i-dependent Ca2+ influx (reverse Na+/Ca2+ exchange) and Rb+i stimulates Ca2+o-dependent Ca2+ efflux (Ca2+/Ca2+ exchange), no sizable transport of rubidium ions is coupled to calcium movement through the exchanger. Moreover, in the isolated membrane preparation no 86Rb+ uptake was associated with Ca2+/Ca2+ exchange. We conclude that in squid axons although monovalent cations activate the Na+/Ca2+ exchange they are not cotransported.  相似文献   

13.
A mechanism for Na/Ca transport   总被引:12,自引:6,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
  相似文献   

14.
Squid giant axons injected with either aequorin or arsenazo III and bathed in 3 mM Ca (Na) seawater were transferred to 3 mM Ca (K) seawater and the response of the aequorin light or the change in the absorbance of arsenazo III was followed. These experimental conditions were chosen because they measure the change in the rate of Na/Ca exchange in introducing Ca into the axon upon depolarization; [Ca]o is too low to effect a channel-based system of Ca entry. This procedure was applied to axons treated with a variety of compounds that have been implicated as inhibitors of Na/Ca exchange. The result obtained was that the substances tested could be placed in three groups. (a) Substances that were without effect on Ca entry effected by Na/Ca exchange were: D600 at 10-100 microM, nitrendipine at 1-5 microM, Ba2+ and Mg2+ at concentrations of 10-50 mM, lidocaine at 0.1-10 mM, cyanide at 2 mM, adriamycin at a concentration of 3 microM, chloradenosine at 35 microM, 2,4-diaminopyridine at 1 mM, Cs+ at 45-90 mM, and tetrodotoxin at 10(-7). (b) Substances that had a significant inhibitory effect on Na/Ca exchange were: Mn2+, Cd2+, and La3+ at 1-50 mM, and quinidine at 50 microM. (c) There were also blocking agents and biochemical inhibitors whose action appeared to be the inhibition of nonmitochondrial Ca buffering in axoplasm rather than an inhibition of Na/Ca exchange. These were the general anesthetic l-octanol at 0.1 mM and 1 mM orthovanadate plus apyrase.  相似文献   

15.
Magnesium efflux in dialyzed squid axons   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The efflux of Mg++ from squid axons subject to internal solute control by dialysis is a function of ionized [Mg], [Na], [ATP], and [Na]o. The efflux of Mg++ from an axon with physiological concentrations of ATP, Na, and Mg inside into seawater is of the order of 2-4 pmol/cm2s but this efflux is strongly inhibited by increases in [Na]i, by decreases in [ATP]i, or by decreases in [Na]o. The efflux of Mg++ is largely independent of [Mg]i when ATP is at physiological levels, but in the absence of ATP reaches half the value of Mg efflux in be presence of ATP when [Mg]i is about 4 mM and [Na] 40 mM. Half-maximum responses to ATP occur at about 350 micronM ATP into seawater with Na either present or absent. The Mg efflux mechanism has many similarities to the Ca efflux system in squid axons especially with respect to the effects of ATP, Nao, and Na on the flux. The concentrations of free Mg and Ca in axoplasm differ, however, by a factor of 10(5) while the observed fluxes differ by a factor of 10(2).  相似文献   

16.
Summary Giant axons from the marine annelidMyxicola infundibulum were internally dialyzed with solutions containing22Na ions as tracers of Na efflux. In experiments performed in Li-substituted seawater, Na efflux that is dependent on external Ca ion concentration, [Ca2+] o , was measured using dialysis to maintain [Na+] i at 100mm, which enhances the [Ca2+] o -dependent Na efflux component, (i.e., reverse-mode Na/Ca exchange). When dialysis fluid contained EGTA (1mm) to buffer the internal Ca concentration, [Ca2+] i , to desired levels, Na efflux lost its normal sensitivity to external calcium. The inhibition was not simply due to the Ca-chelating action of EGTA to produce insufficient [Ca2+] i to activate Na/Ca exchange. The addition of EGTA inhibited Ca o -dependent Na efflux even when a large enough excess of [Ca2+] i was present to saturate the EGTA and still produce elevated values of [Ca2+] i . Control experiments showed that these high values of [Ca2+] i resulted in normal Na/Ca exchange in the absence of EGTA. It is concluded that the presence of EGTA itself interferes with the manifestation of reverse-mode Na/Ca exchange inMyxicola giant axons.  相似文献   

17.
Coupled Na+ exit/Ca2+ entry (Na/Ca exchange operating in the Ca2+ influx mode) was studied in giant barnacle muscle cells by measuring 22Na+ efflux and 45Ca2+ influx in internally perfused, ATP-fueled cells in which the Na+ pump was poisoned by 0.1 mM ouabain. Internal free Ca2+, [Ca2+]i, was controlled with a Ca-EGTA buffering system containing 8 mM EGTA and varying amounts of Ca2+. Ca2+ sequestration in internal stores was inhibited with caffeine and a mitochondrial uncoupler (FCCP). To maximize conditions for Ca2+ influx mode Na/Ca exchange, and to eliminate tracer Na/Na exchange, all of the external Na+ in the standard Na+ sea water (NaSW) was replaced by Tris or Li+ (Tris-SW or LiSW, respectively). In both Na-free solutions an external Ca2+ (Cao)-dependent Na+ efflux was observed when [Ca2+]i was increased above 10(-8) M; this efflux was half-maximally activated by [Ca2+]i = 0.3 microM (LiSW) to 0.7 microM (Tris-SW). The Cao-dependent Na+ efflux was half-maximally activated by [Ca2+]o = 2.0 mM in LiSW and 7.2 mM in Tris-SW; at saturating [Ca2+]o, [Ca2+]i, and [Na+]i the maximal (calculated) Cao-dependent Na+ efflux was approximately 75 pmol#cm2.s. This efflux was inhibited by external Na+ and La3+ with IC50's of approximately 125 and 0.4 mM, respectively. A Nai-dependent Ca2+ influx was also observed in Tris-SW. This Ca2+ influx also required [Ca2+]i greater than 10(-8) M. Internal Ca2+ activated a Nai-independent Ca2+ influx from LiSW (tracer Ca/Ca exchange), but in Tris-SW virtually all of the Cai-activated Ca2+ influx was Nai-dependent (Na/Ca exchange). Half-maximal activation was observed with [Na+]i = 30 mM. The fact that internal Ca2+ activates both a Cao-dependent Na+ efflux and a Nai-dependent Ca2+ influx in Tris-SW implies that these two fluxes are coupled; the activating (intracellular) Ca2+ does not appear to be transported by the exchanger. The maximal (calculated) Nai-dependent Ca2+ influx was -25 pmol/cm2.s. At various [Na+]i between 6 and 106 mM, the ratio of the Cao-dependent Na+ efflux to the Nai-dependent Ca2+ influx was 2.8-3.2:1 (mean = 3.1:1); this directly demonstrates that the stoichiometry (coupling ratio) of the Na/Ca exchange is 3:1. These observations on the coupling ratio and kinetics of the Na/Ca exchanger imply that in resting cells the exchanger turns over at a low rate because of the low [Ca2+]i; much of the Ca2+ extrusion at rest (approximately 1 pmol/cm2.s) is thus mediated by an ATP-driven Ca2+ pump.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The control of ionized calcium in squid axons   总被引:9,自引:6,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Measurements of the Ca content, [Ca](T), of freshly isolated squid axons show a value of 60 μmol/kg axoplasm. Axons in 3 mM Ca(Na) seawater show little change in Ca content over 4 h, while axons in 3 mM Ca(Na) seawater show little change in Ca content over 4 h, while axons in 10 mM Ca(Na) seawater show gains of 18 μmol/Ca/kgxh. In 10 Ca (Choline) seawater the gain is 2,400 μmol/kgxh. Using aequorin confined to a dialysis capillary in the center of an axon, one finds that [Ca](i) is in a steady state with 3 Ca (Na) seawater, and that both 10 Ca (Na) and 3 Ca (choline) seawater cause increases in [Ca](i). In 3 Ca (Na) seawater-3 Ca (choline) seawater mixtures, 180 mM [Na](0) (40 perecent Na) is as effective as 450 mM [Na](0) (100 percent Na) in maintaining a normal [Ca](1); lower [Na] causes an increase in [Ca](i). If axons are injected with the ATP-splitting enzyme apyrase, the resulting [Ca](1) is not loading with high [Ca](0) or low [Na](0) solutions. Depolarization of an axon with 100 mM K (Na) seawater leads to an increase in the steady-state level of [Ca](1) that is reversed upon returning the axon to normal seawater. Freshly isolated axons treated with either CN or FCCP to inhibit mitochondrial Ca buffering can still maintain a normal [Ca](i) in 1 Ca (Na) seawater.  相似文献   

19.
Investigation of Ca fluxes in desheathed bundles of myelinated nerve of frog indicates an intracellular Ca concentration of 5 x 10(-4) mol . kg-1 (axoplasm) and an average transmembrane flux of 6 x 10(-8) mol. kg-1 . s-1 at an extracellular Ca concentration of 1 mM. Replacement of extracellular Na by isosmotic sucrose increases Ca influx threefold and decreases efflux by 50%. Similar, but significantly smaller, effects are observed when Tris or choline are substituted for Na. Li replaces Na without significant changes in Ca fluxes. The data demonstrate that Ca transmembrane fluxes in this preparation are sensitive to changes in the Na gradient. The observed flux changes, however, are too small to establish a Na-Ca exchange as the sole homeostatic mechanism for intracellular Ca. Moreover, as Li appears to serve as a good Na substitute and even Tris and choline interact with Ca flux, the exchange does not show the specificity described for squid axon.  相似文献   

20.
The stoichiometry and voltage dependence of the Na/K pump were studied in internally dialyzed, voltage-clamped squid giant axons by simultaneously measuring, at various membrane potentials, the changes in Na efflux (delta phi Na) and holding current (delta I) induced by dihydrodigitoxigenin (H2DTG). H2DTG stops the Na/K pump without directly affecting other current pathways: (a) it causes no delta I when the pump lacks Na, K, Mg, or ATP, and (b) ouabain causes no delta I or delta phi Na in the presence of saturating H2DTG. External K (Ko) activates Na efflux with Michaelis-Menten kinetics (Km = 0.45 +/- 0.06 mM [SEM]) in Na-free seawater (SW), but with sigmoid kinetics in approximately 400 mM Na SW (Hill coefficient = 1.53 +/- 0.08, K1/2 = 3.92 +/- 0.29 mM). H2DTG inhibits less strongly (Ki = 6.1 +/- 0.3 microM) in 1 or 10 mM K Na-free SW than in 10 mM K, 390 mM Na SW (1.8 +/- 0.2 microM). Dialysis with 5 mM each ATP, phosphoenolpyruvate, and phosphoarginine reduced Na/Na exchange to at most 2% of the H2DTG-sensitive Na efflux. H2DTG sensitive but nonpump current caused by periaxonal K accumulation upon stopping the pump, was minimized by the K channel blockers 3,4-diaminopyridine (1 mM), tetraethylammonium (approximately 200 mM), and phenylpropyltriethylammonium (20-25 mM) whose adequacy was tested by varying [K]o (0-10 mM) with H2DTG present. Two ancillary clamp circuits suppressed stray current from the axon ends. Current and flux measured from the center pool derive from the same membrane area since, over the voltage range -60 to +20 mV, tetrodotoxin-sensitive current and Na efflux into Na-free SW, under K-free conditions, were equal. The stoichiometry and voltage dependence of pump Na/K exchange were examined at near-saturating [ATP], [K]o and [Na]i in both Na-free and 390 mM Na SW. The H2DTG-sensitive F delta phi Na/delta I ratio (F is Faraday's constant) of paired measurements corrected for membrane area match, was 2.86 +/- 0.09 (n = 8) at 0 mV and 3.05 +/- 0.13 (n = 6) at -60 to -90 mV in Na-free SW, and 2.72 +/- 0.09 (n = 7) at 0 mV and 2.91 +/- 0.21 (n = 4) at -60 mV in 390 mM Na SW. Its overall mean value was 2.87 +/- 0.07 (n = 25), which was not significantly different from the 3.0 expected of a 3 Na/2 K pump.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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