Potassium-sodium distribution in human lymphocytes: Description by the association-induction hypothesis
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Cellular Physiology
- Vol. 98 (1) , 95-105
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.1040980111
Abstract
Human lymphocytes were equilibrated for 48 hours over a wide range of external potassium levels, and their contents of potassium, sodium, and water determined. As external potassium rose from zero, cell potassium rose steeply in a sigmoidal fashion, reached half-saturation at 0.4 mM external potassium, and then saturated at 129 mmoles/kg cells. The saturable cell potassium exchanged mole-for-mole with sodium. Analysis of the saturable components by a statistical-mechanical adsorption model demonstrated a cooperative interaction between sites determining equilibrium potassium-sodium distribution. Superimposed upon the saturable fraction of cell potassium was a smaller one that was non-saturable with increasing external potassium to at least 64 mM, and that, when expressed as mmoles/liter cell water, existed in a ratio to external potassium of 0.6. The results strongly support the association-induction hypothesis, which predicts a small non-saturable component of ions determined by exclusion from oriented cell water and a cooperative interaction between sites throughout the cell that associate with potassium or sodium.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Potassium Accumulation Frog Muscle: The Association-Induction Hypothesis Versus the Membrane TheoryScience, 1977
- The physical state of water and ions in living cells and a new theory of the energization of biological work performance by ATPMolecular and Cellular Biochemistry, 1977
- Ion contents of human lymphocytesExperimental Cell Research, 1976
- A KINETIC STUDY OF THE Na PUMP IN RED CELLS: ITS RELEVANCE TO THE MECHANISM OF ACTIVE TRANSPORT*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1974
- THE PHYSICAL STATE OF SOLUTES AND WATER IN LIVING CELLS ACCORDING TO THE ASSOCIATION‐INDUCTION HYPOTHESIS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1973
- COOPERATIVE SPECIFIC ADSORPTION*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1973
- THE INFLUENCE OF RUBIDIUM AND CESIUM IONS ON THE RESTING POTENTIAL OF GUINEA‐PIG HEART MUSCLE CELLS AS PREDICTED BY THE ASSOCIATION‐INDUCTION HYPOTHESIS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1973
- Pumps or No PumpsScience, 1972
- Reassessment of the role of ATP in vivoJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1970
- On the nature of allosteric transitions: A plausible modelJournal of Molecular Biology, 1965