Basolateral potassium membrane permeability of A6 cells and cell volume regulation

Abstract
The K+ permeabilities (86Rb(K) transport) of the basolateral membranes (JbK) of a renal cell line (A6) were compared under isosmotic and hypo-osmotic conditions (serosal side) to identify the various components involved in cell volume regulation. Changing the serosal solution to a hypo-osmotic one (165 mOsm) induced a fast transient increase in Ca i (max 86Rb(K) transport and the SCC were partially blocked by Ba2+, quinidine, TEA and glibenclamide, the latter being the least effective. Changing the osmolarity from isosmotic to hypo-osmotic resulted in an immediate (within the first 3–6 min) stimulation of the 86Rb(K) transport followed by a progressive decline to a stable value higher than that found in isosmotic conditions. A serosal Ca2+-free media or quinidine addition did not affect the initial osmotic stimulation of JbK but prevented its “secondary regulation,” whereas TEA, glibenclamide and DIDS completely blocked the initial JbK increase. Under hypo-osmotic conditions, the initial JbK increase was enhanced by the presence of 1 mm of barium and delayed with higher concentrations (5 mm). In addition, cell volume regulation was fully blocked by quinidine, DIDS, NPPB and glibenclamide, while partly inhibited by TEA and calcium-free media. We propose that a TEA- and glibenclamide-sensitive but quinidine-insensitive increase in K+ permeability is involved in the very first phase of volume regulation of A6 cells submitted to hypo-osmotic media. In achieving cell volume regulation, it would play a complementary role to the quinidine-sensitive K+ permeability mediated by the observed calcium rise.