The influence of the chloride gradient across red cell membranes on sodium and potassium movements
- 1 May 1971
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 214 (3) , 509-536
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1971.sp009446
Abstract
1. A study has been made to see whether active and passive movements of sodium and potassium in human red blood cells are influenced by changing the chloride gradient and hence the potential difference across the cell membrane.2. Chloride distribution was measured between red cells and isotonic solutions with a range of concentrations of chloride and non-penetrating anions (EDTA, citrate, gluconate). The cell chloride concentration was greater than that outside with low external chloride, suggesting that the sign of the membrane potential was reversed. The chloride ratio (internal/external) was approximately equal to the inverse of the hydrogen ion ratio at normal and low external chloride, and inversely proportional to external pH. These results show that chloride is passively distributed, making it valid to calculate the membrane potential from the chloride ratio.3. Ouabain-sensitive (pump) potassium influx and sodium efflux were decreased by not more than 20 and 40% respectively on reversing the chloride gradient, corresponding to a change in membrane potential from -9 to +30 mV. In contrast, passive (ouabain-insensitive) movements were reversibly altered - potassium influx was decreased about 60% and potassium efflux was increased some tenfold. Sodium influx was unaffected by the nature of the anion and depended only on the external sodium concentration, whereas ouabain-insensitive sodium efflux was increased about threefold. When external sodium was replaced by potassium there was a decrease in ouabain-insensitive sodium efflux with normal chloride, but an increase in low-chloride medium.4. Net movements of sodium and potassium were roughly in accord with the unidirectional fluxes.5. The results suggest that reversing the chloride gradient and, therefore, the sign of the membrane potential, had little effect on the sodium pump, but caused a marked increase in passive outward movements of both sodium and potassium ions.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- An increase in potassium efflux in human red cells associated with reversing the sign of the membrane potential.1970
- The coupling of downhill ion movements associated with reversal of the sodium pump in human red cellsThe Journal of Physiology, 1970
- Properties of Hemoglobin Solutions in Red CellsThe Journal of general physiology, 1968
- The sensitivity of the sodium pump to external sodiumThe Journal of Physiology, 1967
- Measurement of 24Na and 42K with a liquid-scintillation counting system without added scintillator.1966
- The connexion between active cation transport and metabolism in erythrocytesBiochemical Journal, 1965
- Automatic liquid scintillation counting of high-energy β emitters in tissue slices and aqueous solutions in the absence of organic scintillatorAnalytical Biochemistry, 1965
- Sodium and potassium movements in human red cellsThe Journal of Physiology, 1956
- Potentiometric determination of chloride in biological fluidsBiochemical Journal, 1952
- Cation control in human erythrocytesThe Journal of Physiology, 1949