Author:
Crespo L. M.,Novak T. S.,Freedman J. C.
Abstract
The effects of intracellular calcium, or Cac, on the Na permeability of human red blood cells were examined during 3-h incubations with the Ca ionophore A23187 and varied external Ca, Cao. Above 3 microM Cao, Nac increased significantly as ATP decreased. Maintenance of normal ATP with vanadate did not prevent the gain of Nac. Similar amounts of Nac were gained in 3 h by ouabain-treated cells exposed to the K ionophore valinomycin or by cells osmotically shrunken. Cells shrunken with sucrose also exhibited partial loss of Kc. When the cells with increased Nac were subsequently transferred to Na-free, high-K medium, the Nac and Kc that had changed slowly over 3 h returned toward normal within 10 min. The development of irreversible high cation permeability in shrunken cells was not prevented by a variety of transport inhibitors. These observations and cell volume distributions suggest that prolonged shrinkage induces a subpopulation of cells to become highly cation permeable, or "prolytic". The major effect of Cac on Na permeability appears to be an indirect consequence of cell shrinkage due to KCl loss.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
19 articles.
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