Chloride conductance of the Amphiuma red cell membrane

Abstract
Like most other red cells, the giant erythrocytes ofAmphiuma means possess a system for rapid exchange of chloride across the membrane. Also, there are indications that the net transport of chloride in these cells is slow. The size ofAmphiuma erythrocytes allows direct measurements of membrane potential with microelectrodes. The present work exploits the possibility that such measurements can be used to give a quantitative estimate of the chloride conductance (GCl) of the Amphiuma red cell membrane. The membrane potential was measured as a function of extracellular chloride concentration (5–120mM), using an impermeant anion (Para-amino-hippurate) as a substitute. Furthermore, the effect of different pH values (6.0–7.2) was studied. For each extracellular chloride concentration the membrane potential was determined at a pH at which hydroxyl, hydrogen, and bicarbonate ions were in electrochemical equilibrium. From these membrane potentials and the corresponding chloride concentrations in the medium (at constant intracellular ion concentrations), theGCl of the membrane was calculated to be 3.9×10−7 {ie27-1} cm−2. This value is some six orders of magnitude smaller than that calculated from the rate of tracer exchange under equilibrium conditions. The experimental strategy used gives the value for a “partial transference number” which takes into account only ions which arenot in electrochemical equilibrium. Whereas this approach gives a value forGCl, it does not permit calculation of the overall membrane conductance. From the calculated value ofGCl it is possible to estimate that the maximal value of the combined conductances of hydroxyl (or proton) and bicarbonate ions is 0.6×10−7 {ie27-2} cm−2. The large discrepancy between the rate of exchange of chloride and its conductance is in agreement with measurements on human and sheep red cells employing the ionophore valinomycin to increase the potassium conductance of the membrane. The results in the present study were, however, obtained without valinomycin and an accompanying assumption of a constant field in the membrane. Therefore, the present measurements give independent support to the above mentioned conclusions.