首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Regulation of cell volume is a fundamental property of all mammalian cells. Multiple signaling pathways are known to be activated by cell swelling and to contribute to cell volume homeostasis. Although cell mechanics and membrane tension have been proposed to couple cell swelling to signaling pathways, the impact of swelling on cellular biomechanics and membrane tension have yet to be fully elucidated. In this study, we use atomic force microscopy under isotonic and hypotonic conditions to measure mechanical properties of endothelial membranes including membrane stiffness, which reflects the stiffness of the submembrane cytoskeleton complex, and the force required for membrane tether formation, reflecting membrane tension and membrane-cytoskeleton attachment. We find that hypotonic swelling results in significant stiffening of the endothelial membrane without a change in membrane tension/membrane-cytoskeleton attachment. Furthermore, depolymerization of F-actin, which, as expected, results in a dramatic decrease in the cellular elastic modulus of both the membrane and the deeper cytoskeleton, indicating a collapse of the cytoskeleton scaffold, does not abrogate swelling-induced stiffening of the membrane. Instead, this swelling-induced stiffening of the membrane is enhanced. We propose that the membrane stiffening should be attributed to an increase in hydrostatic pressure that results from an influx of solutes and water into the cells. Most importantly, our results suggest that increased hydrostatic pressure, rather than changes in membrane tension, could be responsible for activating volume-sensitive mechanisms in hypotonically swollen cells.  相似文献   

2.
The technique for the simultaneous recording of cell volume changes and pHi in single cells was used to study the role of HCO3- in regulatory volume decrease (RVD) by the osteosarcoma cells UMR-106-01. In the presence of HCO3-, steady state pHi is regulated by Na+/H+ exchange, Na+ (HCO3-)3 cotransport and Na(+)-independent Cl-/HCO3- exchange. Following swelling in hypotonic medium, pHi was reduced from 7.16 +/- 0.02 to 6.48 +/- 0.02 within 3.4 +/- 0.28 min. During this period of time, the cells performed RVD until cell volume was decreased by 31 +/- 5% beyond that of control cells (RVD overshoot). Subsequently, while the cells were still in hypotonic medium, pHi slowly increased from 6.48 +/- 0.02 to 6.75 +/- 0.02. This increase in pHi coincided with an increase in cell volume back to normal (recovery from RVD overshoot or hypotonic regulatory volume increase (RVI)). The same profound changes in cell volume and pHi after cell swelling were observed in the complete absence of Cl- or Na+, providing HCO3- was present. On the other hand, depolarizing the cells by increasing external K+ or by inhibition of K+ channels with quinidine, Ba2+ or tetraethylammonium prevented the changes in pHi and RVD. These findings suggest that in the presence of HCO3-, RVD in UMR-106-01 cells is largely mediated by the conductive efflux of K+ and HCO3-. Removal of external Na+ but not Cl- prevented the hypotonic RVI that occurred after the overshoot in RVD. Amiloride had no effect, whereas pretreatment with 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS) strongly inhibited hypotonic RVI. Thus, hypotonic RVI is mediated by a Na+(out)-dependent, Cl(-)-independent and DIDS-inhibitable mechanism, which is indicative of a Na+(HCO3-)3 cotransporter. This is the first evidence for the involvement of this transporter in cell volume regulation. The present results also stress the power of the new technique used in delineating complicated cell volume regulatory mechanisms in attached single cells.  相似文献   

3.
After osmotic swelling, cell volume is regulated by a process called regulatory volume decrease (RVD). Although actin cytoskeletons are known to play a regulatory role in RVD, it is not clear how actin‐binding proteins are involved in the RVD process. In the present study, an involvement of an actin‐binding protein, α‐actinin‐4 (ACTN4), in RVD was examined in human epithelial HEK293T cells. Overexpression of ACTN4 significantly facilitated RVD, whereas siRNA‐mediated downregulation of endogenous ACTN4 suppressed RVD. When the cells were subjected to hypotonic stress, the content of ACTN4 increased in a 100,000 × g pellet, which was sensitive to cytochalasin D pretreatment. Protein overlay assays revealed that ABCF2, a cytosolic member of the ABC transporter superfamily, is a binding partner of ACTN4. The ACTN4‐ABCF2 interaction was markedly enhanced by hypotonic stimulation and required the NH2‐terminal region of ABCF2. Overexpression of ABCF2 suppressed RVD, whereas downregulation of ABCF2 facilitated RVD. We then tested whether ABCF2 has a suppressive effect on the activity of volume‐sensitive outwardly rectifying anion channel (VSOR), which is known to mediate Cl? efflux involved in RVD, because another ABC transporter member, CFTR, was shown to suppress VSOR activity. Whole‐cell VSOR currents were largely reduced by overexpression of ABCF2 and markedly enhanced by siRNA‐mediated depletion of ABCF2. Thus, the present study indicates that ACTN4 acts as an enhancer of RVD, whereas ABCF2 acts as a suppressor of VSOR and RVD, and suggests that a swelling‐induced interaction between ACTN4 and ABCF2 prevents ABCF2 from suppressing VSOR activity in the human epithelial cells. J. Cell. Physiol. 227: 3498–3510, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of hypotonic shock on cultured pavement gill cells from freshwater (FW)- and seawater (SW)-adapted trout was investigated. Exposure to 2/3rd strength Ringer solution produced an increase in cell volume followed by a slow regulatory volume decrease (RVD). The hypotonic challenge also induced a biphasic increase in cytosolic Ca(2+) with an initial peak followed by a sustained plateau. Absence of external Ca(2+) did not modify cell volume under isotonic conditions, but inhibited RVD after hypotonic shock. [Ca(2+)](i) response to hypotonicity was also partially inhibited in Ca-free bathing solutions. Similar results were obtained whether using cultured gill cells prepared from FW or SW fishes. When comparing freshly isolated cells with cultured gill cells, a similar Ca(2+) signalling response to hypotonic shock was observed regardless of the presence or absence of Ca(2+) in the solution. In conclusion, gill pavement cells in primary culture are able to regulate cell volume after a cell swelling and express a RVD response associated with an intracellular calcium increase. A similar response to a hypotonic shock was recorded for cultured gill cells collected from FW and SW trout. Finally, we showed that calcium responses were physiologically relevant as comparable results were observed with freshly isolated cells exposed to hypoosmotic shock.  相似文献   

5.
Exposure to hypotonic stress produces a transient increase in cell volume followed by a regulatory volume decrease (RVD) in both THP-1 and HL-60 cells. In contrast, cells exposed to hypotonic stress in a high K/low Na Hanks' solution not only failed to volume regulate, but displayed a secondary swelling. Thus, while an outward K gradient was required ful KVD, the secondary swelling indicated that hypotonic stress increased permeability in the absence of a negative membrane potential. The K channel blocker quinine (1–4 mM) blocked RVD in both cell types. Gramicidin's ability to overcome the quinine block of RVD indicated that RVD is mediated by a quinine-sensitive cation transport mechanism that is independent of the swelling-induced anion transport mechanism. Barium (1–4 mM), another K channel blocker, slowed the rate of RVD, while 4-aminopyridine, charybdotoxin, tetraethylammonium chloride, tetrabutylammonium chloride, and gadolinium had no effect on RVD. Furthermore, RVD was not mediated by calcium-activated conductances, since it occurred normally in Ca-free medium, in medium containing cadmium, and in BAPTA-loaded cells. Gramicidin produced little or no volume change in isotonic medium, suggesting that basal C1 permeability of both THP-1 and HL-60 cells is low. However, swelling induced an anion efflux pathway that is permeable to both chloride and bromide, but is impermeable to methanesulfonate and glutamate. The anion channel blocker 3,5-diiodosalicylic acid (DISA) antagonized RVD in both cell types. In conclusion, RVD in THP-1 and HL-60 cells is mediated by independent anion and cation transport mechanisms that involve both a DISA-sensitive anion pathway and a quinine-inhibitable K efflux pathway, neither of which requires increases in intra-cellular calcium to be activated. © 1994 wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
We determined differences in the Ca2+ signalling of K+ and Cl- conductances required for Regulatory Volume Decrease (RVD) in jejunal villus enterocytes passively swollen (0.5 or 0.95.isotonic) compared with swelling because of the absorption of D-glucose (D-Glc) or L-Alanine (L-Ala). Cell volume was measured using electronic cell sizing. In nominally Ca(2+)-free medium containing EGTA (100 microM) RVD after 0.5 or 0.95.isotonic challenge was prevented. L-Ala swelling and subsequent RVD was influenced in Ca(2+)-free medium. Villus cells were incubated with 10 microM of the acetomethoxy derivative of 1,2.bis (2-aminophenoxy) ethane N,N,N1,N1 tetracetic acid (BAPTA-AM) and RVD after 0.5.isotonic swelling or L-Ala swelling was prevented. Niguldipine (0.1 microM), nifedipine (5 microM), diltiazem (100 microM), Ni2+, and Co2+ (1 mM) all prevented hypotonic RVD but had no effect on RVD after L-Ala addition. Charybdotoxin (25 nM) a potent inhibitor of Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels, had no effect on hypotonic RVD but prevented RVD of villus cells swollen by D-Glc. We used the calmodulin antagonists, naphthalene sulfonamide derivatives W-7 and W-13, to assess calmodulin activation of K+ and Cl- conductance in these two models. L-Ala swelling and subsequent RVD was not influenced by 25 microM W-7; hypotonic RVD was prevented by 25 microM W-7 or 100 microM W-13. The W-13 inhibition of RVD was by-passed with 0.5 microM gramicidin. Our data show that hypotonic RVD requires extracellular Ca2+ and that the K+ conductance activated is not charybdotoxin sensitive but requires calmodulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
In most animal cells, hypotonic swelling is followed by a regulatory volume decrease (RVD) thought to prevent cell death. In contrast, goldfish hepatocytes challenged with hypotonic medium (180 mosM, HYPO) increase their volume 1.7 times but remain swollen and viable for at least 5 h. Incubation with ATPgammaS (an ATP analog) in HYPO triggers a 42% volume decrease. This effect is concentration dependent (K(1/2) = 760 nM) and partially abolished by P2 receptor antagonists (64% inhibition). A similar induction of RVD is observed with ATP, UTP, and UDP, whereas adenosine inhibits RVD. Goldfish hepatocytes release more than 500 nM ATP during the first minutes of HYPO with no induction of RVD. The fact that similar concentrations of ATPgammaS did trigger RVD could be explained by showing that ATPgammaS induced ATP release. Finally, we observed that in a very small extracellular volume, hepatocytes do show a 56% RVD. This response was diminished by P2 receptor antagonists (73%) and increased (73%) when the extracellular ATP hydrolysis was inhibited 72%. Using a mathematical model, we predict that during the first 2 min of HYPO exposure the extracellular [ATP] is mainly governed by ATP diffusion and by both nonlytic and lytic ATP release, with almost no contribution from ecto-ATPase activity. We show that goldfish hepatocytes under standard HYPO (large volume) do not display RVD unless this is triggered by the addition of micromolar concentrations of nucleotides. However, under very low assay volumes, sufficient endogenous extracellular [ATP] can build up to induce RVD.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
We present a new technique for the simultaneous measurement of cell volume changes and intracellular ionic activities in single cells. The technique uses measurement of changes in the concentration of intracellularly trapped fluorescent dyes to report relative cell volume. By using pH- or Ca(2+)-sensitive dyes and recording at the ion-sensitive and -insensitive (isosbestic) wavelengths, the method can measure both cell volume changes and intracellular ionic activities. The technique was used to study the mechanisms of regulatory volume decrease (RVD) in the osteosarcoma cell line UMR-106-01 grown on cover slips. Swelling cells in 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (HEPES)-buffered hypotonic medium was followed by stable cytosolic acidification and a decrease in cell volume back toward normal. The recovery of cell volume could be blocked by depolarization, treatment with ouabain, or depletion of cell Cl-. These suggest the conductive efflux of K+ and Cl- during RVD. The cytosolic acidification that accompanied cell swelling was not blocked by amiloride, bafilomycin A, or removal of Cl- and could not be reproduced by depletion of cellular ATP. These findings exclude Na+/H+ and Cl-/HCO-3 exchange, intracellularly generated acid, or increased metabolism, respectively, as the cause of the acidification. The cell swelling-induced acidification was inhibited by depolarization, suggesting the involvement of an electrogenic pathway. The acidification, as well as RVD, was inhibited by short incubation with deoxyglucose, and these effects could not be reversed by valinomycin. Thus, the anionic pathway(s) participating in RVD and the acidification are sensitive to the cellular level of ATP. Together, these studies indicate that RVD in UMR-106-01 cells in HEPES-buffered medium is mediated by the conductive efflux of K+, Cl-, and OH-.  相似文献   

10.
The mechanism of volume regulation in hypotonic media was analysed in human peripheral blood mononuclear (PBM) cells. Electronic cell sizing showed that hypotonic swelling is followed by a regulatory volume decrease (RVD) phase. This was confirmed by both electron microscopy and by cellular water determinations. The rate of regulatory shrinking was proportional to the degree of hypotonicity in the 0.5–0.9 X isotonic range. Cell viability was only marginally affected in this range. The content of cellular K+ decreased during RVD, while Na+ content remained unchanged. Similarly, the efflux of 86Rb (used as a K+ analog) increased upon dilution, whereas 22Na efflux was not altered. 86Rb uptake was enhanced by hypotonic stress and both ouabain-sensitive and -insensitive components were affected. A ouabain-sensitive stimulation was also seen in Na+- free media. Ouabain partially inhibited RVD only if added to the cells hours before hypotonic challenge. A normal shrinking response was observed in K+-free media, and also in Na+-free media when Li+, choline+, or Tris+ were the substitutes. In high K+ or Rb+ hypotonic media shrinking was absent and a second swelling phase was observed. Cs+ displayed an intermediate behavior, with shrinking observed at lower dilutions and secondary swelling at higher ones. The direction and magnitude of the response also changed when the external K+ concentration was varied and, with 50 mM K+, no regulatory volume change occurred following hypotonic stress. These findings suggest that RVD occurs largely by a passive loss of cellular K+, resulting from a selective increase in permeability to this ion. In addition, the (Na-K) pump appears to be activated upon cell swelling by a mechanism other than Na+ entry into the cell, but this activation is not essential for RVD.  相似文献   

11.
In renalischemia, tubular obstruction induced by swelling of epithelialcells might be an important mechanism for reduction of the glomerularfiltration rate. We investigated ischemic cell swelling byexamining volume regulation of A6 cells during metabolic inhibition(MI) induced by cyanide and 2-deoxyglucose. Changes in cell volume weremonitored by recording cell thickness (Tc). Intracellular pH (pHc) measurements were performed with thepH-sensitive probe 5-chloromethyl-fluoresceine diacetate.Tc measurements showed that MI increases cellvolume. Cell swelling during MI is proportional to the rate ofNa+ transport and is not followed by a volume regulatoryresponse. Furthermore, MI prevents the regulatory volume decrease (RVD) elicited by a hyposmotic shock. MI induces a pronounced intracellular acidification that is conserved during a subsequent hypotonic shock. Atransient acidification induced by a NH4Cl prepulse causes a marked delay of the RVD in response to a hypotonic shock. On theother hand, acute lowering of external pH to 5, simultaneously with thehypotonic shock, allowed the onset of RVD. However, this RVD wascompletely arrested ~10 min after the initiation of the hyposmoticchallenge. The inhibition of RVD appears to be related to thepronounced acidification that occurred within this time period. Incontrast, when external pH was lowered 20 min before the hyposmoticshock, RVD was absent. These data suggest that internal acidificationinhibits cellular volume regulation in A6 cells. Therefore, theintracellular acidification associated with MI might at least partlyaccount for the failure of volume regulation in swollen epithelial cells.

  相似文献   

12.
Summary Arachidonic acid inhibits the cell shrinkage observed in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells during regulatory volume decrease (RVD) or after addition of the Ca ionophore A23187 plus Ca. In Na-containing media, arachidonic acid increases cellular Na uptake under isotonic as well as under hypotonic conditions. Arachidonic acid also inhibits KCl and water loss following swelling in Na-free, hypotonic media even when a high K conductance has been ensured by addition of gramicidin. In isotonic, Na-free medium arachidonic acid inhibits A23187 + Ca-induced cell shrinkage in the absence but not in the presence of gramicidin. It is proposed that inhibition of RVD in hypotonic media by arachidonic acid is caused by reduction in the volume-induced Cl and K permeabilities as well as by an increase in Na permeability and that reduction in A23187 + Ca-induced cell shrinkage is due to a reduction in K permeability and an increase in Na permeability. The A23187 + Ca-activated Cl permeability in unaffected by arachidonic acid. PGE2 inhibits RVD in Na-containing, hypotonic media but not in Na-free, hypotonic media, indicating a PGE2-induced Na uptake. PGE2 has no effect on the volume-activated K and Cl permeabilities. LTB4, LTC4 and LTE4 inhibit RVD insignificantly in hypotonically swollen cells. LTD4, more-over, induces cell shrinkage in steady-state cells and accelerates the RVD following hypotonic exposure. The effect of LTD4 even reflects a stimulating effect on K and Cl transport pathways. Thus none of the leukotrienes show the inhibitory effect found for arachidonic acid on the K and Cl permeabilities. The RVD response in hypotonic, Na-free media is, on the other hand, also inhibited by addition of the unsaturated oleic, linoleic, linolenic and palmitoleic acid, even in the presence of the cationophor gramicidin. The saturated arachidic and stearic acid had no effect on RVD. It is, therefore, suggested that a minor part of the inhibitory effect of arachidonic acid on RVD in Na-containing media is via an increased synthesis of prostaglandins and that the major part of the arachidonic acid effect on RVD in Na-free media, and most probably also in Na-containing media, is due to the inhibition of the volume-induced K and Cl transport pathways, caused by a nonspecific detergent effect of an unsaturated fatty acid.  相似文献   

13.
We examined the effects of alterations in endothelial cell volume on transendothelial albumin permeability. Studies were done using a confluent monolayer of bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells grown on gelatinized microporous filters. When endothelial cells were exposed to media made hypertonic with 200 mM mannitol, the intracellular volume (measured with 14C-urea) decreased twofold and remained decreased over a 30-minute time-span, thus showing no significant regulatory volume increase (RVI) within this time period. When endothelial cells were exposed to hypotonic media, intracellular volume rapidly doubled within 2 minutes, and then decreased to baseline values within 10 minutes in spite of the sustained hypotonic environment, a process known as regulatory volume decrease (RVD). We also measured the transendothelial flux of 125I-albumin with the cells exposed to the same osmotic changes. We observed that only under hypertonic conditions was there a significant change in the 125I-albumin permeability. These results indicate that the pulmonary artery endothelial cells in culture alter their cell volume when exposed to variations in the osmotic environment, and also show RVD in response to hypotonic conditions but no RVI within 40 minutes after exposure to hypertonic conditions. The transendothelial albumin permeability did not change under hypotonic conditions but increased under hypertonic conditions. Thus, endothelial cells shrinkage may be an important mechanism of increased endothelial macromolecule permeability. These volume changes may occur in endothelial cells in situ and have a role in inducing alterations in the transendothelial permeability to proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Chloride channels are expressed ubiquitously in different cells. However, the activation and roles of volume-activated chloride channels under normal isotonic conditions are not clarified, especially in lymphatic cells. In this study, the activation of basal and volume-activated chloride currents and their roles in maintenance of basal cell volume under isotonic conditions were investigated in human acute lymphoblastic leukemia Molt4 cells. The patch-clamp technique and time-lapse image analysis were employed to record whole-cell currents and cell volume changes. Under isotonic conditions, a basal chloride current was recorded. The current was weakly outward-rectified and volume-sensitive and was not inactivated obviously in the observation period. A 47% hypertonic bath solution and the chloride channel blockers NPPB and tamoxifen suppressed the current. Exposure of cells to 47% hypotonic bath solution activated further the basal current. The hypotonicity-activated current possessed properties similar to those of the basal current and was inhibited by NPPB, tamoxifen, ATP and hypertonic bath solution. Furthermore, extracellular hypotonic challenges swelled the cells and induced a regulatory volume decrease (RVD). Extracellular applications of NPPB, tamoxifen and ATP swelled the cells under isotonic conditions and inhibited the RVD induced by hypotonic cell swelling. The results suggest that some volume-activated chloride channels are activated under isotonic conditions, resulting in the appearance of the basal chloride current, which plays an important role in the maintenance of basal cell volume in lymphoblastic leukemia cells. Chloride channels can be activated further to induce a regulatory volume recovery when cells are swollen.  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.
Using a microfluidic volume sensor, we studied the dynamic effects of Hg2+ on hypotonic stress-induced volume changes in CHO cells. A hypotonic challenge to control cells caused them to swell but did not evoke a significant regulatory volume decrease (RVD). Treatment with 100 muM HgCl2 caused a substantial increase in the steady-state volume following osmotic stress. Continuous hypotonic challenge following a single 10-min exposure to HgCl2 produced a biphasic volume increase with a steady-state volume 100% larger than control cells. Repeated hypotonic challenges to cells exposed once to Hg2+ resulted in a sequential approach to the same steady-state volume. Stimulation after reaching steady state caused a reduction in peak cell volume. Repeated stimulation was different than continuous stimulation resulting in a more rapid approach to steady state. Substituting extracellular Na+ with impermeant NMDG+ in the hypotonic solution produced a rapid RVD-like volume decrease and eliminated the Hg2+-induced excess swelling. The volume decrease in the presence of Hg2+ was inhibited by tetraethylammonium and 4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid disodium, blockers of K+ and Cl(-) channels, respectively, suggesting that part of the Hg2+ effect was increasing NaCl influx over KCl efflux. The presence of multiple phases of steady-state volume and their sensitivity to the stimulation history suggests that factors beyond solute fluxes, such as modification of mechanical stress within the cytoskeleton also plays a role in the response to hypotonic stress.  相似文献   

17.
The present study explores the impact of the molecular size on the permeation of low-molecular-weight polyethylene glycols (PEG200-1500) through the plasma membrane of Jurkat cells under iso- and hypotonic conditions. To this end, we analyzed the cell volume responses to PEG-substituted solutions of different osmolalities (100-300 mOsm) using video microscopy. In parallel experiments, the osmotically induced changes in the membrane capacitance and cytosolic conductivity were measured by electrorotation (ROT). Upon moderate swelling in slightly hypotonic solutions (200 mOsm), the lymphocyte membrane remained impermeable to PEG300-1500, which allowed the cells to accomplish regulatory volume decrease (RVD). During RVD, lymphocytes released intracellular electrolytes through the swelling-activated pathways, as proved by a decrease of the cytosolic conductivity measured by electrorotation. RVD also occurred in strongly hypotonic solutions (100 mOsm) of PEG600-1500, whereas 100 mOsm solutions of PEG300-400 inhibited RVD in Jurkat cells. These findings suggest that extensive hypotonic swelling rendered the cell membrane highly permeable to PEG300-400, but not to PEG600-1500. The swelling-activated channels conducting PEG300-400 were inserted into the plasma membrane from cytosolic vesicles via swelling-mediated exocytosis, as suggested by an increase of the whole cell capacitance. Using the hydrodynamic radii Rh of PEGs (determined by viscosimetry), the observed size-selectivity of membrane permeation yielded an estimate of ∼ 0.74 nm for the cut-off radius of the swelling-activated channel for organic osmolytes. Unlike PEG300-1500, the smallest PEG (PEG200, Rh = 0.5 nm) permeated the lymphocyte membrane under isotonic conditions thus leading to a continuous isotonic swelling. The results are of interest for biotechnology and biomedicine, where PEGs are widely used for cryopreservation of cells and tissues.  相似文献   

18.
Summary PGE2 and LTC4 syntheses in Ehrlich ascites cells were measured by radioimmunoassay. Hypotonic swelling results in stimulation of the leukotriene synthesis and a concomitant reduction in the prostaglandin synthesis. If the cells have access to sufficient arachidonic acid there is a parallel increase in the synthesis of both leukotrienes and prostaglandins following hypotonic exposure. PGE2 significantly inhibits regulatory volume decrease (RVD) following hypotonic swelling in Na-containing medium but not in Na-free media, supporting the hypothesis that the effect of PGE2 is on the Na permeability. PGE2 also had no effect on RVD in Na-free media in the presence of the cation ionophore gramicidin. Since the Cl permeability becomes rate limiting for RVD in the presence of gramicidin, whereas the K permeability is rate limiting in its absence, it is concluded that PGE2 neither affects Cl nor K permeability. Addition of LTD4 accelerates RVD and since the K permeability is rate limiting for RVD this shows that LTD4 stimulates the K permeability. Inhibition of the leukotriene synthesis by nordihydroguaiaretic acid inhibits RVD even when a high K conductance has been ensured by the presence of gramicidin. It is, therefore, proposed that an increase in leukotriene synthesis after hypotonic swelling is involved also in the activation of the Cl transport pathway.  相似文献   

19.
Chen Q  Peng H  Lei L  Zhang Y  Kuang H  Cao Y  Shi QX  Ma T  Duan E 《Cell research》2011,21(6):922-933
In the journey from the male to female reproductive tract, mammalian sperm experience a natural osmotic decrease (e.g., in mouse, from ~415 mOsm in the cauda epididymis to ~310 mOsm in the uterine cavity). Sperm have evolved to utilize this hypotonic exposure for motility activation, meanwhile efficiently silence the negative impact of hypotonic cell swelling. Previous physiological and pharmacological studies have shown that ion channel-controlled water influx/efflux is actively involved in the process of sperm volume regulation; however, no specific sperm proteins have been found responsible for this rapid osmoadaptation. Here, we report that aquaporin3 (AQP3) is a sperm water channel in mice and humans. Aqp3-deficient sperm show normal motility activation in response to hypotonicity but display increased vulnerability to hypotonic cell swelling, characterized by increased tail bending after entering uterus. The sperm defect is a result of impaired sperm volume regulation and progressive cell swelling in response to physiological hypotonic stress during male-female reproductive tract transition. Time-lapse imaging revealed that the cell volume expansion begins at cytoplasmic droplet, forcing the tail to angulate and form a hairpin-like structure due to mechanical membrane stretch. The tail deformation hampered sperm migration into oviduct, resulting in impaired fertilization and reduced male fertility. These data suggest AQP3 as an essential membrane pathway for sperm regulatory volume decrease (RVD) that balances the "trade-off" between sperm motility and cell swelling upon physiological hypotonicity, thereby optimizing postcopulatory sperm behavior.  相似文献   

20.
We recently reported that ATP is released from Necturus erythrocytes via a conductive pathway during hypotonic swelling and that extracellular ATP potentiates regulatory volume decrease (RVD). This study was designed to determine whether extracellular ATP exerts its effect via a purinoceptor. This was accomplished using three different experimental approaches: 1) hemolysis studies to examine osmotic fragility, 2) a Coulter counter to assess RVD, and 3) the whole-cell patch-clamp technique to measure membrane currents. We found extracellular ATP and ATPγS, two P2 agonists, decreased osmotic fragility, enhanced cell volume recovery in response to hypotonic shock, and increased whole-cell currents. In addition, 2-methylthio-ATP potentiated RVD. In contrast, UTP, α,β-methylene-ATP, and 2′-& 3′-O-(4-benzoyl-benzoyl) adenosine 5′-triphosphate and the P1 agonist adenosine had no effect regardless of experimental approach. Furthermore, the P2 antagonist suramin increased osmotic fragility, inhibited RVD, and reduced whole-cell conductance in swollen cells. Consistent with a previous study that indicated cell swelling activates a K+ conductance, suramin had no effect in the presence of gramicidin (a cationophore used to maintain a high K+ permeability). We also found the P2 antagonist pyridoxal-5-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2′4-disulfonic acid (PPADS) increased osmotic fragility; however, reactive blue 2 and the P1 antagonists caffeine and theophylline had no effect. Our results show that extracellular ATP activated a P2 receptor in Necturus erythrocytes during hypotonic swelling, which in turn potentiated RVD by stimulating K+ efflux. Pharmacological evidence suggested the presence of a P2X receptor subtype. Received: 6 January 2001/Revised: 17 April 2001  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号