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1.
β-Adrenergic- and volume-dependent regulation of 22Na influx and 86Rb influx and efflux in erythrocytes of brown trout (Salmo trutta m. lacustris) were studied. Norepinephrine (10-6 mol·1-1) increased the rate of 22Na influx 10-to 20-fold via the activation of a Na/H exchanger (ethyl isopropyl amiloride inhibited component of 22Na influx). Unlike carp erythrocytes the activity of the Na, K-pump (ouabain-inhibited 86Rb influx) was only slightly (25–35%) increased by norepinephrine. The norepinephrine-induced increment of Na, K-pump activity was completely abolished by ethyl isopropyl amiloride thus indicating that this effect was mediated by Na/H exchanger-induced increase of intracellular Na+ concentration. Cell shrinkage in hyperosmotic media resulted in a several-fold activation of the Na/H exchanger. Cell swelling in hypotonic media increased both the rate of K, Cl-cotransport [((dihydroindenyl)oxy)alcanaic acidsensitive components of 86Rb influxe and efflux] and passive permeability (leakage) of erythrocyte membranes for Na+ and K+. No volume-dependent regulation of Na, K, 2Cl-cotransport (bumetanide-sensitive components of 86Rb fluxes) was found. It may be concluded that the regulation of monovalent cation transport in erythrocytes of fast-moving (carnivorous) brown trout differs essentially from that in slowly moving (herbivorous) carp.  相似文献   

2.
To determine Na+/H+ exchange in lamprey erythrocyte membranes, the cells were acidified to pH(i) 6.0 using the K+/H+ ionophore nigericin. Incubation of acidified erythrocytes in a NaCl medium at pH 8.0 caused a considerable rise in 22Na+ influx and H+ efflux during the first 1 min of exposure. In addition, exposure of acidified red cells to NaCl medium was associated with rapid elevation of intracellular Na+ content. The acid-induced changes in Na+ influx and H+ efflux were almost completely inhibited by amiloride and dimethylamiloride. In native lamprey erythrocytes, amiloride-sensitive Na+ influx progressively increased as the osmolality of incubation medium was increased by addition of 100, 200, or 300 mmol/l sucrose. Unexpectedly, the hypertonic stress induced a small, yet statistically significant decrease in intracellular Na+ content in these cells. The reduction in the cellular Na+ content increased with hypertonicity of the medium. The acid- and shrinkage-induced Na+ influxes were inhibited by both amiloride and 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)-amiloride (EIPA) in a dose-dependent manner. For both blockers, the half-maximal inhibitory values (IC50) were much greater for the shrinkage-induced (44 and 15 micromol/l for amiloride and EIPA, respectively) than for the acid-induced Na+ influx (5.1 and 3.3 micromol/l, respectively). The data obtained are the first demonstration of the presence of a Na+/H+ exchanger with high activity in acidified (pH(i) 6.0) lamprey red blood cells (on average, 512 +/- 56 mmol/l cells/h, n = 13). The amiloride-sensitive Na+ influxes produced by hypertonic cell shrinkage and acid load are likely to be mediated by distinct ion transporters in these cells.  相似文献   

3.
Swelling of pig red cells leads to an increase in a chloride-dependent K flux which can be potentiated by cAMP, whereas cell shrinking causes a selective increase in Na movement which is mediated by a Na/H exchanger. We examined the influence of adenosine and adenosine receptor agonists on the volume-sensitive, ouabain-resistant, chloride-dependent K flux, referred to as Rb flux and volume-activated Na/H exchange pathway. It was found that adenosine and adenosine receptor agonists inhibited the Rb flux. N6-cyclohexyl adenosine (CHA) has been found to be the most potent inhibitor with EC50 of approximately 4.5 microM followed by 2-chloroadenosine (Cl-ado) with EC50 of approximately 27 microM and 5'-(N-ethyl)-carboxamido-adenosine (NECA) with EC50 of approximately 185 microM. CHA also inhibits the cAMP-stimulated Rb flux. However, CHA does not alter the basal intracellular cAMP level nor the intracellular cAMP content raised by exogenously added cAMP. In contrast to the adenosine agonist action on the Rb flux, Na/H exchange, which is activated upon cell shrinkage, exhibits a slight stimulation in response to CHA. These findings suggest that the presence of A1 adenosine receptors on the surface of red cells influences the regulation of volume-activated ion transport.  相似文献   

4.
1. Membrane transport of Na ions was investigated in red blood cells of bears by methods of measurement of unidirectional isotopic fluxes. 2. Like red blood cells of dogs, bear red cells contain a high Na concentration and low concentrations of K and ATP. 3. As in dog red cells, Na efflux from bear cells was not inhibited by ouabain but was activated by the presence of Ca in the medium, possibly indicating the presence of a Na-Ca exchange mechanism. 4. ATP depletion of cells was accelerated by Ca in the medium, consistent with the presence of a strong ATP-dependent Ca pump. 5. As in other carnivore red cells, Na influx into bear cells was strongly activated by shrinkage and inhibited by swelling. Shrinkage-activated influx was blocked by amiloride. 6. Amiloride-sensitive influx was activated by cytoplasmic Ca and also correlated with the presence of a Na-dependent, amiloride-sensitive H loss. 7. Amiloride-sensitive Na influx exhibited a strong seasonal cycle with a minimum in the middle of the hibernation period, suggesting a possible avenue of cellular energy conservation.  相似文献   

5.
Unidirectional (22)Na, Li(+) and Rb(+) fluxes and net fluxes of Na(+) and K(+) were measured in U937 human leukemic cells before and after induction of apoptosis by staurosporine (1 microM, 4 h) to answer the question which ion transporter(s) are responsible for changes in cell ion and water balance at apoptosis. The original version of the mathematical model of cell ion and water balance was used for analysis of the unidirectional ion fluxes under the balanced distribution of major monovalent ions across the cell membrane. The values of all major components of the Na(+) and K(+) efflux and influx, i.e. fluxes via the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase pump, Na(+) channels, K(+) channels, Na/Na exchanger and Na-Cl symport were determined. It is concluded that apoptotic cell shrinkage and changes in Na(+) and K(+) fluxes typical of apoptosis in U937 cells induced by staurosporine are caused by a complex decrease in the pump activity, Na-Cl symport and integral Na(+) channel permeability.  相似文献   

6.
Activation of potassium ion transport in mitochondria by cadmium ion   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Low levels of Cd2+ (1-5 microM) produce rapid swelling of mitochondria, which is respiration-dependent and uncoupler-sensitive. No cation requirement is apparent, since the swelling occurs in a medium containing only sucrose and the respiratory substrate. The swelling is inhibited by ruthenium red, suggesting that this effect of Cd2+ requires its entry into mitochondria. In medium containing 9 mM K+, addition of Cd2+ along with ruthenium red increases the rate of K+ influx threefold. In the presence of K+, Rb+ or Li+, but not of Na+, addition of Cd2+ produces first efflux of H+ into the medium followed by discharge of the pH gradient or uncoupling. Only the latter effect is inhibited by ruthenium red, showing that the efflux and influx of H+ are independent reactions. The H+ efflux appears to be an antiport response to the induced K+ entry. Its activation by Cd2+ is similar to the known effect of p-chloromercuriphenyl sulfonate. The H+ influx or uncoupling appears to result from binding of Cd2+ to some matrix-facing membrane site, perhaps the dithiol group on coupling factor B, and may relate to apparent permeability changes associated Cd2+-induced swelling.  相似文献   

7.
In Amphiuma red blood cells, the Na/H exchanger has been shown to play a central role in the regulation of cell volume following cell shrinkage (Cala, P. M. 1980. Journal of General Physiology. 76:683- 708.) The present study was designed to evaluate the existence of pH regulatory Na/H exchange in the Amphiuma red blood cell. The data illustrate that when the intracellular pHi was decreased below the normal value of 7.00, Na/H exchange was activated in proportion to the degree of acidification. Once activated, net Na/H exchange flux persisted until normal intracellular pH (6.9-7.0) was restored, with a half time of approximately 5 min. These observations established a pHi set point of 7.00 for the pH-activated Na/H exchange of Amphiuma red blood cell. This is in contrast to the behavior of osmotically shrunken Amphiuma red blood cells in which no pHi set point could be demonstrated. That is, when activated by cell shrinkage the Na/H exchange mediated net Na flux persisted until normal volume was restored regardless of pHi. In contrast, when activated by cell acidification, the Na/H exchanger functioned until pHi was restored to normal and cell volume appeared to have no effect on pH-activated Na/H exchange. Studies evaluating the kinetic and inferentially, the molecular equivalence of the volume and pHi-induced Amphiuma erythrocyte Na/H exchanger(s), indicated that the apparent Na affinity of the pH activated cells is four times greater than that of shrunken cells. The apparent Vmax is also higher (two times) in the pH activated cells, suggesting the involvement of two distinct populations of the transporter in pH and volume regulation. However, when analyzed in terms of a bisubstrate model, the same data are consistent with the conclusion that both pH and volume regulatory functions are mediated by the same transport protein. Taken together, these data support the conclusion that volume and pH are regulated by the same effector (Na/H exchanger) under the control of as yet unidentified, distinct and cross inhibitory volume and pH sensing mechanisms.  相似文献   

8.
1. Membrane transport of K ions was investigated in red blood cells of bears by methods of measurement of unidirectional isotopic fluxes. 2. Unlike red cells of dogs, red cells of bears exhibited a significant, though small, component of ouabain-sensitive K influx. 3. Ouabain-insensitive K influx, as in other carnivore cells, was activated by swelling and inhibited by shrinkage. Swelling-induced K influx was dependent upon presence of chloride ions but was not inhibited by furosemide or bumetanide. 4. Ouabain-sensitive K influx was largest with ATP and with high concentration of Na in the cell, but it persisted in the absence of cytoplasmic Na or ATP. It was also resistant to the drug, harmaline, at a concentration that in other cells fully inhibits ouabain-sensitive K influx. 5. It was concluded that under such adverse conditions ouabain-sensitive K influx represents another mode of the Na/K pump not fully described elsewhere. 6. Also, as in low K red cells of sheep and goat, apparent absence of Na/K pump activity in carnivore red cells may represent suppression rather than elimination of activity. 7. Ouabain-insensitive K influx showed a seasonal pattern with minima occurring in early winter, earlier than for the minimum observed in Na influx. 8. Ouabain-sensitive K influx tended to be lower in the hibernation season of the bear, but the seasonal pattern was not consistent.  相似文献   

9.
Sodium and calcium movements in dog red blood cells   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Determinants of 45Ca influx, 45Ca efflux, and 22Na efflux were examined in dog red blood cells. 45Ca influx is strongly influenced by the Na concentration on either side of the membrane, being stimulated by intracellular Na and inhibited by extracellular Na. A saturation curve is obtained when Ca influx is plotted as a function of medium Ca concentration. The maximum Ca influx is a function of pH (increasing with greater alkalinity) and cell volume (increasing with cell swelling). Quinidine strongly inhibits Ca influx. Efflux of 45Ca is stimulated by increasing concentrations of extracellular Na. 22Na efflux is stimulated by either Ca or Na in the medium, and the effects of the two ions are mutually exclusive rather than additive. Quinidine inhibits Ca-activated 22Na efflux. The results are considered in terms of a model for Ca-Na exchange, and it is concluded that the system shows many features of such a coupled ion transport system. However, the stoichiometric ratio between Ca influx and Ca-dependent Na efflux is highly variable under different experimental conditions. Because the Ca fluxes may reflect a combination of ATP-dependent, outward transport and Na-linked passive movements, the true stoichiometry of an exchanger may not be ascertainable in the absence of a specific Ca pump inhibitor. The meaning of these observations for Ca-dependent volume regulation by dog red blood cells is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The effect of cell volume changes in human red cells on ouabain-insensitive net outward cation movements through 1) the Na–K and Li–K cotransport, 2) the Li–Na counter-transport system and 3) the furosemide-insensitive Na, K and Li pathway was studied. Cell volume was altered by changing a) the internal cation content (isosmotic method) or b) the external osmolarity of the medium (osmotic method). Na–K and Li–K cotransport were measured as the furosemide-sensitive Na or Li and K efflux into (Na, Li and K)-free (Mg-sucrose replacement) medium from cells loaded to contain approximately equal concentrations of Na and K, or a constant K/Li concentration ratio of 91, respectively. Li–Na countertransport was assayed as the Na-stimulated Li efflux from Li-loaded cells and net furosemide-insensitive outfluxes in (Na, Li and K)-free media containing 1mm furosemide. Swelling of cells by the isosmotic, but not by the osmotic method reduced furosemide-sensitive Na and Li but not K efflux by 80 and 86%, respectively. Changes in cell volume by both methods had no effect on Li–Na countertransport. The effects of cell volume changes were measured on the rate constants of ouabain- and furosemide-insensitive cation fluxes and were found to be complex. Isosmotic shrinkage more than doubled the rate constants of Na and Li efflux but did not affect that of K efflux. Osmotic shrinkage increased the K efflux rate constant by 50% only in cells loaded for countertransport. Isosmotic cell swelling specifically increased the K+ efflux rate constants both in cells loaded for cotransport and countertransport assays while no effect was observed in cells swollen by the osmotic method. Thus, the three transport pathways responded differently to changes in cell volume, and, furthermore, responses were different depending on the method of changing cell water content.  相似文献   

11.
Mechanisms involved in cell volume regulation are important in SS, SC cells as they might be involved in determining the extent of sickling and the generation of dense cells and irreversibly sickled cells. We have studied in these cells the response to cell swelling of the K+,Cl- transporter. We found that Hb SS, SC and CC red cells have higher values of a ouabain-resistant, chloride-dependent and NEM-stimulated K+ efflux than AA red cells. In contrast, the Na+,K+,Cl- cotransport estimated from the bumetanide-sensitive component of K+ efflux was not significantly different in SS, SC and CC red cells. The (ouabain + bumetanide)-resistant K+ efflux from SS, SC and CC red cells was stimulated by cell swelling induced by reduction of the osmotic pressure (300 to 220 mosmol/l) and pH (8 to 7) of the flux media (140 mM NaCl). The Cl--dependent K+ efflux stimulated by osmotic swelling highly correlated with the NEM-stimulated component (r = 0.8, p less than 0.001, n = 22) and the acid-pH-induced swelling (r = 0.969, p less than 0.001, n = 22), indicating that it is driven by the K+,Cl- transporter.  相似文献   

12.
We report in this paper different modes of Na and K transport in human red cells, which can be inhibited by furosemide in the presence of ouabain. Experimental evidence is provided for inward and outward coupled transport of Na and K, Ki/Ko and Nai/Nao exchange, and uncoupled Na or K efflux. The outward cotransport of Na and K was defined as the furosemide-sensitive (FS) component of Na and K effluxes into choline medium and as the Cl-dependent or cis-stimulated component of the ouabain-resistant (OR) Na and K effluxes. Inward cotransport of Na and K was defined by the stimulation by external Na (Nao) of the K influx and the stimulation by external K (Ko) of the Na influx in the presence of ouabain. Both effects were FS and Cl dependent. Experimental evidence for an FS Ki/Ko exchange pathway of the Na/K cotransport was provided by (a) the stimulation by external K of FS K influx and efflux, and (b) the stimulation by internal Na or K of FS K influx in the absence of external Na. Evidence for an FS Nai/Nao exchange pathway was provided by the stimulation of FS Na influx by internal Na from a K-free medium (130 mM NaCl). This pathway was four to six times smaller than the Ki/Ko exchange. In cells containing only Na or K, incubated in media containing only Na or K, respectively, there was FS efflux of the cation without simultaneous inward transport (FS uncoupled Na and K efflux). The stoichiometric ratio of FS outward cotransport of Na and K into choline medium varied with the ratio of Nai-to-Ki concentrations, and when Nai/Ki was close to 1, the ratio of FS outward Na to K flux was also 1. In choline media, FS Na efflux was inhibited by external K (noncompetitively), whereas FS k efflux was stimulated. The stimulation of FS K efflux was due to the stimulation by Ko of the Ki/Ko exchange pathway. Thus, the stoichiometry of FS Na and K effluxes also varied in the presence of external K. A minimal model for a reaction scheme of FS Na and K transport accounts for cis stimulation, trans inhibition, and trans stimulation, and for variable stoichiometry of the FS cation fluxes.  相似文献   

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

14.
Ca2+-activated Na+ fluxes in human red cells. Amiloride sensitivity   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The effect of Ca2+ on the ouabain- and bumetanide-resistant Na+ fluxes in intact red cells was studied at relatively constant internal Ca2+, membrane potential, and cell volume. The red cell calcium concentration was modified using the ionophore A23187. In fresh red cells, the Na+ influx and efflux (1.2 +/- 0.13 and 0.26 +/- 0.07 mmol/liter cells x h, respectively) were not affected by amiloride (1 mM). When external Ca2+ was raised from 0 to 150 microM, in the presence of A23187, both the Na+ influx and efflux were stimulated (about 3.5-fold). The Ca2+-activated Na+ efflux and influx had an apparent Km for activation by Ca2+o of about 25 microM. The Ca2+-dependent Na+ transport was inhibited 30-60% by amiloride (ID50 = 17.3 +/- 8 microM). Amiloride, however, had no effect on the Ca2+-dependent K+ influx. The amiloride-sensitive (AS) transport pathway was a linear function of the Na+o concentration in the range from 0 to 75 mM. The Ca2+i activation seems to depend on the metabolic integrity of red cells. 1) It does not take place in ATP-depleted red cells; 2) ATP-repletion of ATP-depleted red cells fully restored AS Na influx; and 3) ATP-enrichment (ATP-red cells) enhanced the AS Na influx by about 100%. The Ca2+-activated AS Na+ influx was not affected by either DIDS or trifluoperazine. The present results indicate that in human erythrocytes an increase in internal Ca2+ activates on otherwise silent AS Na+-transport system, which is dependent on the metabolic integrity of the red cells.  相似文献   

15.
In response to osmotic perturbation, the Amphiuma red blood cell regulates volume back to "normal" levels. After osmotic swelling, the cells lose K, Cl, and osmotically obliged H2O (regulatory volume decrease [RVD] ). After osmotic shrinkage, cell volume is regulated as a result of Na, Cl, and H2O uptake (regulatory volume increase [RVI] ). As previously shown (Cala, 1980 alpha), ion fluxes responsible for volume regulation are electroneutral, with alkali metal ions obligatorily counter-coupled to H, whereas net Cl flux is in exchange for HCO3. When they were exposed to the Ca ionophore A23187, Amphiuma red blood cells lost K, Cl, and H2O with kinetics (time course) similar to those observed during RVD. In contrast, when cells were osmotically swollen in Ca-free media, net K loss during RVD was inhibited by approximately 60%. A role for Ca in the activation of K/H exchange during RVD was suggested from these experiments, but interpretation was complicated by the fact that an increase in cellular Ca resulted in an increase in the membrane conductance to K (GK). To determine the relative contributions of conductive K flux and K/H exchange to total K flux, electrical studies were performed and the correspondence of net K flux to thermodynamic models for conductive vs. K/H exchange was evaluated. These studies led to the conclusion that although Ca activates both conductive and electroneutral K flux pathways, only the latter pathways contribute significantly to net K flux. On the basis of observations that A23187 did not activate K loss from cells during RVI (when the Na/H exchange was functioning) and that amiloride inhibited K/H exchange by swollen cells only when cells had previously been shrunk in the presence of amiloride, I concluded that Na/H and K/H exchange are mediated by the same membrane transport moiety.  相似文献   

16.
Extracellular ATP (1 mM) inhibited the growth of Friend virus-infected murine erythroleukemia cells (MEL cells) but had no effect on dimethyl sulfoxide-induced differentiation. ATP (1 mM) also caused changes in the permeability of MEL cells to ions. There was an increased influx of 45Ca2+ from a basal level of 5 pmol/min to 18 pmol/min/10(6) cells to achieve a 2-fold increase in steady-state Ca2+ as measured at isotopic equilibration. Ca2+ influx was blocked by diisothiocyanostilbene disulfonate (DIDS), an inhibitor of anion transport. ATP also stimulated Cl- uptake, and this flux was inhibited by DIDS. The ratio of ATP stimulated Cl- to Ca2+ uptake was 1.6:1. K+ and Na+ influx were also stimulated by ATP, but phosphate uptake was inhibited; the Na+ influx dissipated the Na+ gradient and thus inhibited nutrient uptake. ATP-stimulated K+ influx was ouabain inhibitable; however, the total cellular K+ decreased due to an ATP-stimulated ouabain-resistant K+ efflux. Na+ influx and Ca2+ influx occurred by separate independent routes, since Na+ influx was not inhibited by DIDS. The effects observed were specific for ATP *K1/2 MgATP = 0.7 mM) since AMP, GTP, adenosine, and the slowly hydrolyzable ATP analogue adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate were without effect. The major ionic changes in the cell were a decrease in K+ and increase in Na+; cytoplasmic pH and free Ca2+ did not change appreciably. These ATP-induced changes in ion flux are considered to be responsible for growth inhibition.  相似文献   

17.
It is not known whether the activation of Na/H exchange by shrinkage in dog red cells is due to the packing of cell contents or a change in cell configuration. To make this distinction we prepared resealed ghosts that resembled intact cells in hemoglobin concentration and surface area, but had one-third their volume. A shrinkage-induced, amiloride-sensitive Na flux in the ghosts was activated at a much smaller volume in the ghosts than in the intact cells, but at the same concentration (by weight) of dry solids in both preparations. Na/H exchange in ghosts containing a mixture of 40% albumin and 60% hemoglobin (weight/weight) was activated by osmotic shrinkage at a dry solid concentration similar to that of intact cells or of ghosts containing only hemoglobin. We conclude that the process of Na/H exchange activation by cell shrinkage originates with an increase in the concentration of intracellular protein and not with a change in membrane configuration or tension. The macromolecular crowding that accompanies the reduction in cell volume probably alters the activities of key enzymes that in turn modulate the Na/H exchanger.  相似文献   

18.
To differentiate whether the primary volume signal in dog red cells arises from a change in cell configuration or the concentration and dilution of cell contents, we prepared resealed ghosts that had the same surface area and hemoglobin concentration as intact cells but less than 1/3 their volume. Shrinkage of both intact cells and resealed ghosts triggered Na/H exchange. Activation of this transporter in the two preparations correlated closely with cytosolic protein concentration but not at all with volume. The Na/H exchanger was more sensitive to shrinkage in albumin-loaded resealed ghosts than in intact cells or ghosts containing only hemoglobin. Similar results were obtained for the swelling-induced [K-Cl] cotransporter. We believe perception of cell volume originates with changes in cytoplasmic protein concentration. We think the kinases and phosphatases that control the activation of membrane transporters in response to cell swelling or shrinkage are regulated by the mechanism of macromolecular crowding.  相似文献   

19.
The temperature dependence of potassium flux into the red cells of normal and pseudohyperkalaemic individuals over the range 4-40 degrees C was measured using 86RbCl as tracer. Flux through the pump was measured as the ouabain-sensitive component (0.2 mM ouabain) and flux via Na+,K+-cotransport was measured as the decrease in the rate of K+ influx in the presence of 1 mM furosemide. The residual passive permeability of the red cell plasma membranes to K+ was that influx which was unaffected by either inhibitor. When Na+ influxes were measured, the ratio of Na+ to K+ transported via the furosemide-sensitive component was 1 over the full temperature range studied. The temperature sensitivity of K+ influx via the pump was normal as was the enzymic activity of the Na+,K+-ATPase. In contrast, the activity of the Na+,K+-cotransport system in pseudohyperkalaemics was more temperature sensitive than that of controls and affected individuals also showed a greater passive permeability to K+ at low temperatures. Red cell membranes from affected individuals have significantly increased amounts of phosphatidylcholine which are balanced, to a degree, by a decreased content of phosphatidylethanolamiane. It is proposed that in this example of familial pseudohyperkalaemia there is an alteration in the structure of the red cell plasma membrane which influences the temperature sensitivity of both its cotransport and passive permeability properties.  相似文献   

20.
During early myocardial ischemia, the myocytes are loaded with Na(+), which in turn leads to Ca(2+) overload and cell death. The pathway of the Na(+) influx has not been fully elucidated. The aim of the study was to quantify the Na(+) inward current through sarcolemmal KATP channels (IKATP,Na) in anoxic isolated cardiomyocytes at the actual reversal potential (Vrev) and to estimate the contribution of this current to the Na(+) influx in the ischemic myocardium. IKATP,Na was determined in excised single channel patches of mouse ventricular myocytes and macropatches of Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing SUR2A/Kir6.2 channels. In the presence of K+ ions, the respective permeability ratios for Na(+) to K(+) ions, PNa/PK, were close to 0.01. Only in the presence of Na(+) ions on both sides of the membrane was IKATP,Na similarly large to that calculated from the permeability ratio PNa/PK, indicative of a Na(+) influx that is largely independent of the K+ efflux at Vrev. With the use of a peak KATP channel conductance in anoxic cardiomyocytes of 410 nS, model simulations for a myocyte within the ischemic myocardium showed that the amplitude of the Na(+) influx and K(+) efflux is even larger than the respective fluxes by the Na(+) - K(+) pump and all other background fluxes. These results suggest that during early ischemia the Na(+) influx through KATP channels essentially contributes to the total Na+ influx and that it also balances the K(+) efflux through KATP channels.  相似文献   

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