Basolateral Na(+)-H+ antiporter. Mechanisms of electroneutral and conductive ion transport.
Open Access
- 1 May 1994
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 103 (5) , 895-916
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.103.5.895
Abstract
The basolateral Na-H antiporter of the turtle colon exhibits both conductive and electroneutral Na+ transport (Post and Dawson. 1992. American Journal of Physiology. 262:C1089-C1094). To explore the mechanism of antiporter-mediated current flow, we compared the conditions necessary to evoke conduction and exchange, and determined the kinetics of activation for both processes. Outward (cell to extracellular fluid) but not inward (extracellular fluid to cell) Na+ or Li+ gradients promoted antiporter-mediated Na+ or Li+ currents, whereas an outwardly directed proton gradient drove inward Na+ or Li+ currents. Proton gradient-driven, "counterflow" current is strong evidence for an exchange stoichiometry of > 1 Na+ or Li+ per proton. Consistent with this notion, outward Na+ and Li+ currents generated by outward Na+ or Li+ gradients displayed sigmoidal activation kinetics. Antiporter-mediated proton currents were never observed, suggesting that only a single proton was transported per turnover of the antiporter. In contrast to Na+ conduction, Na+ exchange was driven by either outwardly or inwardly directed Na+, Li+, or H+ gradients, and the activation of Na+/Na+ exchange was consistent with Michaelis-Menten kinetics (K1/2 = 5 mM). Raising the extracellular fluid Na+ or Li+ concentration, but not extracellular fluid proton concentration, inhibited antiporter-mediated conduction and activated Na+ exchange. These results are consistent with a model for the Na-H antiporter in which the binding of Na+ or Li+ to a high-affinity site gives rise to one-for-one cation exchange, but the binding of Na+ or Li+ ions to other, lower-affinity sites can give rise to a nonunity, cation exchange stoichiometry and, hence, the net translocation of charge. The relative proportion of conductive and nonconductive events is determined by the magnitude and orientation of the substrate gradient and by the serosal concentration of Na+ or Li+.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Charge movements via the cardiac Na,K-ATPase.1992
- Kinetic Properties of the Plasma Membrane Na+ -H+ ExchangerAnnual Review of Physiology, 1985
- Na/Na exchange through the Na/K pump of HK sheep erythrocytes.The Journal of general physiology, 1984
- Current generated by backward-running electrogenic Na pump in squid giant axonsNature, 1984
- Mixed type inhibition of the renal Na+/H+ antiporter by Li+ and amiloride. Evidence for a modifier site.1983
- Band‐3 protein‐mediated anion conductance of the red cell membraneFEBS Letters, 1983
- Relationship of net chloride flow across the human erythrocyte membrane to the anion exchange mechanism.The Journal of general physiology, 1983
- Modifier role of internal H+ in activating the Na+–H+ exchanger in renal microvillus membrane vesiclesNature, 1982
- Interaction of NH4+ and Li+ with the renal microvillus membrane Na+-H+ exchangerAmerican Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology, 1981
- Human erythrocyte anion permeabilities measured under conditions of net charge transferThe Journal of Physiology, 1977