Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University and Hospital, Baltimore
Abstract
It was reported previously that insulin hyperpolarized rat skeletal muscle and decreased K+ flux in both directions. The observations on K+ flux are now extended to take advantage of the greater sensitivity to insulin of hyperphysectomized rats. Insulin caused a shift of water from extracellular to intracellular space if glucose was present, but not in its absence. Insulin caused net gain of muscle fiber K+, though not necessarily an increase in K+ concentration in fiber water. It probably also decreased intrafiber Na+ and Cl-. Insulin decreased K+ efflux. The effect was dose-dependent. Muscles from hypophysectomized rats were more sensitive to the action of insulin on K+ flux than were those from normal rats. The effect was demonstrable within the time resolution of the system, suggesting that insulin's action is on cell surfaces. K+ influx was also decreased by insulin. Bookkeeping suggests that some K+ influx be called active. Insulin seemed to decrease active K+ influx and passive K+ efflux. It is not resolved whether insulin has a true dual effect or whether it acts only on passive fluxes in both directions (the apparent action on active K+ influx being an artefact of incomplete definition of passive flux) or whether a single alteration in the membrane may affect both active and passive fluxes.
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Cited by
71 articles.
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