Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Pharmacology, Cornell University Medical College, New York
Abstract
In many biophysical studies on erythrocytes some quaternary ammonium ions are used as replacements for Na+ and K+ of the physiological solutions. The object of this work was to study the possible uptake of quaternary ammonium ions by erythrocytes. Uptake of C14–choline chloride and C14–tetramethylammonium chloride by human erythrocytes was proved. It was shown that the compounds were neither incorporated into phospholipids of the cell nor converted to any other metabolites. Studies of uptake as a function of time, at several external concentrations of choline and tetramethylammonium, showed that within the first 4 hours uptake was a linear function of time regardless of the external concentration of the quaternary ammonium ions. The effects of various external concentrations of choline and tetramethylammonium ions on the rate of uptake by the cells were studied. The results showed the presence of two distinct mechanisms for the uptake of choline: one, a facilitated uptake mechanism which becomes saturated at low external concentrations of the ion; the other, a simple diffusion mechanism in which the rate of uptake is proportional to concentration. For the facilitated part of the uptake the external choline concentration at which half-maximum rate was obtained was found to be 0.02 mm. Although the kinetic studies with tetramethylammonium ion were not as extensive as those with choline, they did suggest the presence of similar mechanisms for the uptake of both ions. Tetramethylammonium and tetraethylammonium ions were shown to be competitive inhibitors of the facilitated choline uptake.
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Cited by
57 articles.
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