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Omann GM, Rengan R, Hoffman JF, Linderman JJ. Rapid oscillations of actin polymerization/depolymerization in polymorphonuclear leukocytes stimulated by leukotriene B4 and platelet-activating factor. THE JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY 1995. [DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.155.11.5375] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/01/2023]
Abstract
Abstract
We previously showed that activation of polymorphonuclear leukocytes by leukotriene B4 (LTB4) and platelet-activating factor produces a rapidly oscillating actin polymerization/depolymerization response. In this study, we show that 1) oscillations are not due to the stimulated cyclic release of autocoids that could bind to cell surface receptors and activate subsequent cycles; 2) oscillations are not related to oscillations of ligand binding; and 3) the particular kinetic pattern is a property of the receptor, not of the binding constants of the ligand. The major conclusion of these studies is that the oscillations are a property of the intrinsic signaling pathways triggered by these chemoattractants. We also questioned whether increased actin nucleation activity was induced by LTB4 and found that, although LTB4 induced a transient actin nucleation response, there was not a direct correlation between oscillations of the actin polymerization/depolymerization and the actin nucleation activity. This suggests that processes other than actin nucleation, such as release of monomeric actin from monomer sequestering proteins and regulation of depolymerization, are likely to be involved.
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Omann GM, Rengan R, Hoffman JF, Linderman JJ. Rapid oscillations of actin polymerization/depolymerization in polymorphonuclear leukocytes stimulated by leukotriene B4 and platelet-activating factor. JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY (BALTIMORE, MD. : 1950) 1995; 155:5375-81. [PMID: 7594553] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023]
Abstract
We previously showed that activation of polymorphonuclear leukocytes by leukotriene B4 (LTB4) and platelet-activating factor produces a rapidly oscillating actin polymerization/depolymerization response. In this study, we show that 1) oscillations are not due to the stimulated cyclic release of autocoids that could bind to cell surface receptors and activate subsequent cycles; 2) oscillations are not related to oscillations of ligand binding; and 3) the particular kinetic pattern is a property of the receptor, not of the binding constants of the ligand. The major conclusion of these studies is that the oscillations are a property of the intrinsic signaling pathways triggered by these chemoattractants. We also questioned whether increased actin nucleation activity was induced by LTB4 and found that, although LTB4 induced a transient actin nucleation response, there was not a direct correlation between oscillations of the actin polymerization/depolymerization and the actin nucleation activity. This suggests that processes other than actin nucleation, such as release of monomeric actin from monomer sequestering proteins and regulation of depolymerization, are likely to be involved.
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Martin WH, Richards DE, Marín R, Jack-Hays M, Hoffman JF. Comparative aspects of Na+/K+ pump-mediated uncoupled Na+ efflux in red blood cells and kidney proteoliposomes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1994; 91:9881-5. [PMID: 7937910 PMCID: PMC44921 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.91.21.9881] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023] Open
Abstract
Ouabain-sensitive uncoupled Na+ efflux has been studied in human, pig, and rat red cells and in vesicles containing reconstituted kidney Na+/K+ pumps obtained from these same species. The red cells from the different species gave qualitatively similar results; the uncoupled Na+ efflux was 15-30% of the Na+/K+ exchange rate, and this flux was inhibited at 5 mM extracellular Na+ (Na+o). At higher levels of Na+o there was a monotonic increase in the Na+ efflux. As has previously been observed in human red cells, the uncoupled efflux from pig red cells consists of Na+ and anion cotransport, suggesting that anion cotransport may be a general characteristic of uncoupled Na+ efflux in red cells. The uncoupled Na+ efflux carried out by pig and rat kidney Na+/K+ pumps differs from the red cell activity in that it represents no more than 2-4% of the Na+/K+ exchange rate and that 5 mM Na+o does not inhibit this efflux. Furthermore, the efflux does not appear to be dependent on anion cotransport. Vesicles containing human kidney Na+/K+ pumps differ from vesicles derived from pig or rat kidneys in that the Na+ efflux is not inhibited or stimulated by Na+ present on the opposite side; it thus appears that the Na+,K(+)-ATPase in these vesicles may be incapable of Na+/Na+ exchange. These results indicate that the ligand and kinetic properties of the uncoupled Na+ efflux mode of red cells are markedly different from kidney-derived Na+/K+ pumps reconstituted into proteoliposomes. The basis for these differences may be inherent in the Na+/K+ pumps themselves or represent differences between the two types of preparations studied.
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Marín R, Hoffman JF. Phosphate from the phosphointermediate (EP) of the human red blood cell Na/K pump is coeffluxed with Na, in the absence of external K. J Gen Physiol 1994; 104:1-32. [PMID: 7964591 PMCID: PMC2229199 DOI: 10.1085/jgp.104.1.1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023] Open
Abstract
This study is concerned with Na/K pump-mediated phosphate efflux that occurs during uncoupled Na efflux in human red blood cells. Uncoupled Na efflux is known to be a ouabain-sensitive mode of the Na/K pump that occurs in the absence of external Nao and Ko. Because this efflux (measured with 22Na) is also inhibited by 5 mM Nao, the efflux can be separated into a Nao-sensitive and a Nao-insensitive component. Previous work established that the Nao-sensitive efflux is actually comprised of an electroneutral coefflux of Na with cellular anions, such as SO4 (as 35SO4). The present work focuses on the Nao-insensitive component in which the principal finding is that orthophosphate (P(i)) is coeffluxed with Na in a ouabain-sensitive manner. This P(i) efflux can be seen to occur, in the absence of Ko, in both DIDS-treated intact cells and resealed red cell ghosts. This efflux of P(i) was shown to be derived directly from the pump's substrate, ATP, by the use of resealed ghosts made to contain both ATP and P(i) in which either the ATP or the P(i) were labeled with, respectively, [gamma-32P]ATP or [32P]H3PO4. (These resealed ghosts also contained Na, Mg, P(i), SO4, Ap5A, as well as an arginine kinase/creatine kinase nucleotide regenerating system for the control of ATP and ADP concentrations, and were suspended usually in (NMG)2SO4 at pH 7.4.) It was found that 32P was only coeffluxed with Na when the 32P was contained in [gamma-32P]ATP and not in [32P]H3PO4. This result implies that the 32P that is released comes from ATP via the pump's phosphointermediate (EP) without commingling with the cellular pool of P(i). Ko (as K2SO4) inhibits this 32P efflux as well as the Nao-sensitive 35SO4 efflux, with a K0.5 of 0.3-0.4 mM. The K0.5 for inhibition of P(i) efflux by Ko is not influenced by Nao, nor can Nao act as a congenor for Ko in any of the flux reactions involving Ko. The stoichiometry of Na to SO4 and Na to P(i) efflux is approximately 2:1 under circumstances where the stoichiometry of Na effluxed to ATP utilized is 3:1. From these and other results reported, it is suggested that there are two types of uncoupled Na efflux that differ from each other on the basis of their sensitivity to Nao, the source (cellular vs substrate) and kind of anion (SO4 vs P(i)) transported.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Marín R, Hoffman JF. ADP+orthophosphate (P(i)) stimulates an Na/K pump-mediated coefflux of P(i) and Na in human red blood cell ghosts. J Gen Physiol 1994; 104:33-55. [PMID: 7964595 PMCID: PMC2229194 DOI: 10.1085/jgp.104.1.33] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023] Open
Abstract
The Na/K pump in human red blood cells that normally exchanges 3 Nai for 2 Ko is known to continue to transport Na in a ouabain-sensitive and ATP-dependent manner when the medium is made free of both Nao and Ko. Although this Na efflux is called "uncoupled" because of removal of ions to exchange with, the efflux has been shown to be comprised of a coefflux with cellular anions. The work described in this paper presents a new mode of operation of uncoupled Na efflux. This new mode not only depends upon the combined presence of ADP and intracellular orthophosphate (P(i))i but the Na efflux that is stimulated to occur is coeffluxed with (P(i))i. These studies were carried out with DIDS-treated resealed red cell ghosts, suspended in buffered (NMG)2SO4, that were made to contain, in addition to other constituents, varying concentrations of ADP and P(i) together with Na2 SO4, MgSO4 and hexokinase. While neither ADP nor P(i) was effective alone, ouabain-sensitive uncoupled Na efflux, (measured with 22Na) could be activated by [ADP+P(i)] where the K0.5 for ADP in the presence of 10 mmol (P(i))i/liter ghosts was 100-200 mumol/liter ghosts and the K0.5 for (P(i))i, in the presence of 500 mumol ADP/liter ghosts was 3-4 mmol/liter ghosts. [ADP+P(i)] activation of this Na efflux could be inhibited by as little as 2 mumol ATP/liter ghosts but the inhibition could be relieved by the addition of 50 mM glucose, given entrapped hexokinase. While ouabain-sensitive Na efflux was found to be coeffluxed with P(i) (measured with entrapped [32P]H3PO4), this was not so for SO4 (measured with 35SO4). The stoichiometry of Na to P(i) efflux was found to be approximately 2 to 1. Na efflux as well as (P(i))i efflux were both inhibited by 10 mM Nao (K0.5 approximately equal to 4 mM). But, whereas 20 mM Ko (K0.5 approximately equal to 6 mM) inhibited the efflux of (P(i))i, as would be expected from previous work, Na efflux was actually increased. When Ko influx was measured in this situation there was a 1 for 1 exchange of Nai for Ko, that is, of course, downhill with respect to the gradient of each ion. Surprisingly AsO4 was unable to replace P(i) for activation of Na efflux but Na efflux could be inhibited by vanadate and oligomycin. In terms of mechanism, it is likely that ADP acts to promote the formation of the phosphoenzyme (EP) by (P(i))i that would otherwise be inhibited by Nai.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Mairbäurl H, Hoffman JF. Internal magnesium, 2,3-diphosphoglycerate, and the regulation of the steady-state volume of human red blood cells by the Na/K/2Cl cotransport system. J Gen Physiol 1992; 99:721-46. [PMID: 1607852 PMCID: PMC2216615 DOI: 10.1085/jgp.99.5.721] [Citation(s) in RCA: 26] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/27/2022] Open
Abstract
This study is concerned with the relationship between the Na/K/Cl cotransport system and the steady-state volume (MCV) of red blood cells. Cotransport rate was determined in unfractionated and density-separated red cells of different MCV from different donors to see whether cotransport differences contribute to the difference in the distribution of MCVs. Cotransport, studied in cells at their original MCVs, was determined as the bumetanide (10 microM)-sensitive 22Na efflux in the presence of ouabain (50 microM) after adjusting cellular Na (Nai) and Ki to achieve near maximal transport rates. This condition was chosen to rule out MCV-related differences in Nai and Ki that might contribute to differences in the net chemical driving force for cotransport. We found that in both unfractionated and density-separated red cells the cotransport rate was inversely correlated with MCV. MCV was correlated directly with red cell 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (DPG), whereas total red cell Mg was only slightly elevated in cells with high MCV. Thus intracellular free Mg (Mgifree) is evidently lower in red cells with high 2,3-DPG (i.e., high MCV) and vice versa. Results from flux measurements at their original MCVs, after altering Mgifree with the ionophore A23187, indicated a high Mgi sensitivity of cotransport: depletion of Mgifree inhibited and an elevation of Mgifree increased the cotransport rate. The apparent K0.5 for Mgifree was approximately 0.4 mM. Maximizing Mgifree at optimum Nai and Ki minimized the differences in cotransport rates among the different donors. It is concluded that the relative cotransport rate is regulated for cells in the steady state at their original cell volume, not by the number of copies of the cotransporter but by differences in Mgifree. The interindividual differences in Mgifree, determined primarily by differences in the 2,3-DPG content, are responsible for the differences in the relative cotransport activity that results in an inverse relationship with in vivo differences in MCV. Indirect evidence indicates that the relative cotransport rate, as indexed by Mgifree, is determined by the phosphorylated level of the cotransport system.
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Hoffman JF. On red blood cells, hemolysis and resealed ghosts. ADVANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY 1992; 326:1-15. [PMID: 1295293 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4615-3030-5_1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 24] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/26/2022]
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Abstract
The red cell Na/K pump is known to continue to extrude Na when both Na and K are removed from the external medium. Because this ouabain-sensitive flux occurs in the absence of an exchangeable cation, it is referred to as uncoupled Na efflux. This flux is also known to be inhibited by 5 mM Nao but to a lesser extent than that inhibitable by ouabain. Uncoupled Na efflux via the Na/K pump therefore can be divided into a Nao-sensitive and Nao-insensitive component. We used DIDS-treated, SO4-equilibrated human red blood cells suspended in HEPES-buffered (pHo 7.4) MgSO4 or (Tris)2SO4, in which we measured 22Na efflux, 35SO4 efflux, and changes in the membrane potential with the fluorescent dye, diS-C3 (5). A principal finding is that uncoupled Na efflux occurs electroneurally, in contrast to the pump's normal electrogenic operation when exchanging Nai for Ko. This electroneutral uncoupled efflux of Na was found to be balanced by an efflux of cellular anions. (We were unable to detect any ouabain-sensitive uptake of protons, measured in an unbuffered medium at pH 7.4 with a Radiometer pH-STAT.) The Nao-sensitive efflux of Nai was found to be 1.95 +/- 0.10 times the Nao-sensitive efflux of (SO4)i, indicating that the stoichiometry of this cotransport is two Na+ per SO4=, accounting for 60-80% of the electroneutral Na efflux. The remainder portion, that is, the ouabain-sensitive Nao-insensitive component, has been identified as PO4-coupled Na transport and is the subject of a separate paper. That uncoupled Na efflux occurs as a cotransport with anions is supported by the result, obtained with resealed ghosts, that when internal and external SO4 was substituted by the impermeant anion, tartrate i,o, the efflux of Na was inhibited 60-80%. This inhibition could be relieved by the inclusion, before DIDS treatment, of 5 mM Cli,o. Addition of 10 mM Ko to tartrate i,o ghosts, with or without Cli,o, resulted in full activation of Na/K exchange and the pump's electrogenicity. Although it can be concluded that Na efflux in the uncoupled mode occurs by means of a cotransport with cellular anions, the molecular basis for this change in the internal charge structure of the pump and its change in ion selectivity is at present unknown.
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Heinz A, Hoffman JF. Membrane sidedness and the interaction of H+ and K+ on Ca2(+)-activated K+ transport in human red blood cells. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1990; 87:1998-2002. [PMID: 2155430 PMCID: PMC53612 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.87.5.1998] [Citation(s) in RCA: 7] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/30/2022] Open
Abstract
The sided effects of H+ on Ca2(+)-stimulated K+ transport (the Gardos channel) were studied in human red blood cells. Cells were loaded with Ca2+ during energy depletion with the internal pH adjusted to desired levels prior to treatment with the anion-exchange inhibitor 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS), which inhibits pH equilibration across the membrane. This treatment provides a "pH clamp" whereby the internal and external H+ (H+i and H+o) concentrations can be varied separately. Channel activity was evaluated by measuring either net K+ loss or unidirectional 42K+ efflux from cells where SO2(-4) replaced Cl- on both sides of the membrane. When pHi was set at 7.4, decreasing pHo from values of 8.0 to 5.0 inhibited K+ efflux. This effect of H+o could be overcome by increasing K+o at all values of pHo. In addition, this effect of K+o could be separated from its effects on altering the membrane potential, indicating an interaction between K+o and H+o on the channel. A similar interaction was shown to occur between H+i and K+i. K+o is known to be required for activation of Ca2(+)-stimulated K+ transport, since the channel in cells preincubated in the absence of K+o (prior to exposure to Ca+i) becomes refractory to subsequent activation by Ca2+i and K+o. We found that H+o would not substitute for K+o in this regard nor would H+o inhibit the protective effect of K+o; in addition, H+ was not transported inward in exchange for K+i. Thus it would appear that there are two external sites where K+o interacts with the channel. One site is antagonized by H+o, whereas the second site is required for channel activation independent of H+ in the range studied. The inside of the channel would have, by an analogous argument, at least one site where K+i and H+i interact.
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Kennedy BG, Lunn G, Hoffman JF. Effects of altering the ATP/ADP ratio on pump-mediated Na/K and Na/Na exchanges in resealed human red blood cell ghosts. J Gen Physiol 1986; 87:47-72. [PMID: 3950576 PMCID: PMC2217126 DOI: 10.1085/jgp.87.1.47] [Citation(s) in RCA: 31] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/08/2023] Open
Abstract
Resealed human red blood cell ghosts were prepared to contain a range of ADP concentrations at fixed ATP concentrations and vice versa. ATP/ADP ratios ranging from approximately 0.2 to 50 were set and maintained (for up to 45 min) in this system. ATP and ADP concentrations were controlled by the addition of either a phosphoarginine- or phosphocreatine-based regenerating system. Ouabain-sensitive unidirectional Na efflux was determined in the presence and absence of 15 mM external K as a function of the nucleotide composition. Na/K exchange was found to increase to saturation with ATP (K 1/2 approximately equal to 250 microM), whereas Na/Na exchange (measured in K-free solutions) was a saturating function of ADP (K 1/2 approximately equal to 350 microM). The elevation of ATP from approximately 100 to 1,800 microM did not appreciably affect Na/Na exchange. In the presence of external Na and a saturating concentration of external K, increasing the ADP concentration at constant ATP was found to decrease ouabain-sensitive Na/K exchange. The decreased Na/K exchange that still remained when the ADP/ATP ratio was high was stimulated by removal of external Na. Assuming that under normal substrate conditions the reaction cycle of the Na/K pump is rate-limited by the conformational change associated with the release of occluded K [E2 X (K) X ATP----E1 X ATP + K], increasing ADP inhibits the rate of these transformations by competition with ATP for the E2(K) form. A less likely alternative is that inhibition is due to competition with ATP at the high-affinity site (E1). The acceleration of the Na/K pump that occurs upon removing external Na at high levels of ADP evidently results from a shift in the forward direction of the transformation of the intermediates involved with the release of occluded Na from E1P X (Na). Thus, the nucleotide composition and the Na gradient can modulate the rate at which the Na/K pump operates.
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Dissing S, Hoffman R, Murnane MJ, Hoffman JF. Chloride transport properties of human leukemic cell lines K562 and HL60. THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY 1984; 247:C53-60. [PMID: 6331187 DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.1984.247.1.c53] [Citation(s) in RCA: 18] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/19/2023]
Abstract
The Cl- transport characteristics of the human leukemic cell lines K562 and HL60, with erythroid and granulocytic phenotypic features, respectively, were investigated. Cl- effluxes were measured with 36Cl- under equilibrium conditions in both cell lines and were found to be three orders of magnitude slower than the unidirectional efflux of Cl- in normal erythrocytes. Induction of differentiation of the K562 cell line with hemin does not affect the rate of Cl- transport, while induction of the HL60 cell line with dimethyl sulfoxide results in a small decrease in the rate of Cl- transport. Cl- transport in both cell lines could be divided into two components. One component is inhibited by treatment with 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS), displays counter-transport characteristics, and has a high energy of activation--all properties characteristic of the human erythrocyte-facilitated anion exchange system. The second component is insensitive to DIDS, is partially inhibited by furosemide, and has a low energy of activation.
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Lee P, Kirk RG, Hoffman JF. Interrelations among Na and K content, cell volume, and buoyant density in human red blood cell populations. J Membr Biol 1984; 79:119-26. [PMID: 6748052 DOI: 10.1007/bf01872116] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/21/2023]
Abstract
This study establishes a method for determining the concentration of Na and K in single red blood cells from electron probe microanalysis of a cell's Na and K content. To this end, red blood cells were separated into subpopulations according to their buoyant density by means of bovine serum density gradient centrifugation. Cell water and Na + K contents were then determined in each fraction by conventional analytic methods with cell volume estimated from measurements of hematocrits and cell number. It was found that an inverse relationship obtains between the mean cell volume and buoyant cell density since cells increased in size as density decreased. Although the amount of hemoglobin per cell was found to slightly increase as cell density decreased, hemoglobin concentration showed the inverse relationship, indicating that buoyant cell density differences are primarily the result of differences in hemoglobin concentration. In confirmation of Funder and Wieth (Funder, J., Wieth, J.O. 1966. Scand. J. Lab. Invest. 18:167-180) cell water and cell volume was found to vary directly with the summed content of Na + K. Finally, by means of electron probe microanalysis of single cells, the cellular concentration of hemoglobin was found to vary inversely with the Na + K content, providing a quantitative basis for directly estimating cell volume, and thus ionic concentration, with this technique.
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Yingst DR, Hoffman JF. Passive Ca transport in human red blood cell ghosts measured with entrapped arsenazo III. J Gen Physiol 1984; 83:1-17. [PMID: 6319541 PMCID: PMC2215620 DOI: 10.1085/jgp.83.1.1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/19/2023] Open
Abstract
The rate of Ca influx into ghosts containing arsenazo III changes with time, being most rapid during the first 5 min after Ca is added to the outside and declining thereafter. The rate of Ca influx is a nonlinear function of extracellular Ca and plateaus as the latter is increased above 1 mM. The rate of Ca influx was measured as a function of the transmembrane gradients of Na and K and changes in the permeability of the membrane to K and Cl produced by valinomycin and SITS (4-acetamido-4'-isothiocyano-stilbene-2-2'-disulfonic acid), respectively. Changes in the rate of Ca influx are consistent with expected effects of these treatments on the membrane potential. Oligomycin (10 micrograms/ml) and quinidine (1 mM) inhibit the rate of Ca uptake by inhibiting Ca-induced changes in the K permeability. At constant membrane potential, furosemide produced a slight (15%) consistent increase in Ca uptake. Other experiments show that resealed ghosts are heterogeneous in their passive permeability to Ca and that A23187 can be used to effectively eliminate such differences. The results of this paper show that resealed human red cell ghosts containing arsenazo III can be used to continuously monitor intracellular free Ca and to study the factors that influence the permeability of the red cell membrane to Ca.
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Yingst DR, Hoffman JF. Ca-induced K transport in human red blood cell ghosts containing arsenazo III. Transmembrane interactions of Na, K, and Ca and the relationship to the functioning Na-K pump. J Gen Physiol 1984; 83:19-45. [PMID: 6319543 PMCID: PMC2215623 DOI: 10.1085/jgp.83.1.19] [Citation(s) in RCA: 47] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/19/2023] Open
Abstract
Increasing free intracellular Ca (Cai) from less than 0.1 microM to 10 microM by means of A23187 activated Ca-stimulated K transport and inhibited the Na-K pump in resealed human red cell ghosts. These ghosts contained 2 mM ATP, which was maintained by a regenerating system, and arsenazo III to measure Cai. Ca-stimulated K transport was activated 50% at 2-3 microM free Cai and the Na-K pump was inhibited 50% by 5-10 microM free Cai. Free Cai from 1 to 8 microM stimulated K efflux before it inhibited the Na-K pump, dissociating the effect of Ca on the two systems. 3 microM trifluoperazine inhibited Ca-stimulated K efflux and 0.5 mM quinidine reduced Na-K pumping by 50%. In other studies, incubating fresh intact cells in solutions containing Ca and 0.5 microM A23187 caused the cells to lose K heterogeneously. Under the same conditions, increasing A23187 to 10 microM initiated a homogeneous loss of K. In ATP-deficient ghosts containing Cai equilibrated with A23187, K transport was activated at the same free Cai as in the ghosts containing 2 mM ATP. Neither Cao nor the presence of an inward Ca gradient altered the effect of free Cai on the permeability to K. In these ghosts, transmembrane interactions of Na and K influenced the rate of Ca-stimulated K efflux independent of Na- and K-induced changes in free Cai or sensitivity to Cai. At constant free Cai, increasing Ko from 0.1 to 3 mM stimulated K efflux, whereas further increasing Ko inhibited it. Increasing Nai at constant Ki and free Cai markedly decreased the rate of efflux at 2 mM Ko, but had no effect when Ko was greater than or equal to 20 mM. These transmembrane interactions indicate that the mechanism underlying Ca-stimulated K transport is mediated. Since these interactions from either side of the membrane are independent of free Cai, activation of the transport mechanism by Cai must be at a site that is independent of those responsible for the interaction of Na and K. In the presence of A23187, this activating site is half-maximally stimulated by approximately 2 microM free Ca and is not influenced by the concentration of ATP. The partial inhibition of Ca-stimulated K efflux by trifluoperazine in ghosts containing ATP suggests that calmodulin could be involved in the activation of K transport by Cai.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Yingst DR, Hoffman JF. Intracellular free Ca and Mg of human red blood cell ghosts measured with entrapped arsenazo III. Anal Biochem 1983; 132:431-48. [PMID: 6625176 DOI: 10.1016/0003-2697(83)90031-3] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/21/2023]
Abstract
Arsenazo III in human red cell ghosts is calibrated to measure intracellular concentrations of free Ca and free Mg. This calibration was established by comparing the absorbance of arsenazo III in ghosts to its absorption in solution at 600, 630, and 655 nm as a function of buffered free Ca (0.4 microM to 70 microM), free Mg (0.05 to 5 mM), and free Ca (4 to 50 microM) at constant free Mg (1.2 mM) at three concentrations of total dye (1.09, 10.9, and 109 microM). In both ghosts and in solution the absorbance of the dye at all three wavelengths could be predicted from dissociation constants and molar extinction coefficients determined for a 1:1 complex with the dye and Mg, another with Ca, and a third complex consisting of two molecules of Ca and two of dye. The absorbance of the dye in ghosts at the same concentrations of free Ca, free Mg, and total dye is equal to that in solution multiplied by the percentage hematocrit and divided by 100, which demonstrates that arsenazo III responds the same inside ghosts as it does free in solution. The results of this paper show that arsenazo III can be used to measure quantitatively and to monitor continuously the concentration of intracellular Ca and Mg in red cell ghosts. Use of this method should facilitate the study of Ca-dependent mechanisms of red blood cells.
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Hoffman JF. The link between metabolism and active transport of sodium in human red cell ghosts. J Membr Biol 1980; 57:143-61. [PMID: 7205943 DOI: 10.1007/bf01869000] [Citation(s) in RCA: 14] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/24/2023]
Abstract
Reconstituted human red blood cell ghosts have been used to assay various metabolic intermediates for their role in driving the Na:K pump. ATP was identified as the primary substrate of the pump. The main evidence was based on 1) the finding that the only requirement for activation of the pump was the presence of ATP, whether incorporated directly or generated by an ATP-yielding reaction; 2) the discriminating effects of various metabolic inhibitors; 3) the competition between the pump and hexokinase reaction for ATP; and 4) the difference in effects of adenosine and inosine in activating the pump in energy-depleted ghosts. ADP was found to affect the Na:K pump due to the presence of an adenylate kinase and perhaps because of an effect on the phosphoryl potential. The sidedness of action of the cardiotonic steroid, strophanthidin, was evaluated and found to inhibit the Na:K pump only from the outside of the membrane. Inhibition of the pump by strophanthidin was also found to spare ATP in reconstituted ghosts provided the nonspecific phosphatase activity was suppressed.
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Hoffman JF, Kaplan JH, Callahan TJ, Freedman JC. Electrical resistance of the red cell membrane and the relation between net anion transport and the anion exchange mechanism. Ann N Y Acad Sci 1980; 341:357-60. [PMID: 6930839 DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1980.tb47183.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 16] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/22/2023]
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Hoffman JF, Kaplan JH, Callahan TJ. The Na:K pump in red cells is electrogenic. FEDERATION PROCEEDINGS 1979; 38:2440-1. [PMID: 488369] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/15/2022]
Abstract
The membrane potential, E, of the red cell measured with a fluorescent dye, 3,3'-dipropylthiadicarbocyanine iodide, hyperpolarizes when the Na:K pump is activated by adding external K and depolarizes upon the subsequent addition of ouabain. The electrogenic pump is optimally observed in cells where internal Na+ has been raised, SO2-(4) has replaced Cl-, and SO2-(4) permeability has been inhibited by 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonate (DIDS)). The change in E associated with the electrogenic component is about 6 mV in human red cells, somewhat smaller in sheep, and larger in duck and Amphiuma red cells. The membrane resistance, Rm, can be estimated from the pump-dependent change in E and from the current flow assumed to be one-third the ouabain-sensitive Na efflux. In human red cells, Rm is about 1 X 10(6) ohm-cm2. Rm calculated from the residual DIDS-insensitive SO2-(4) flux is also about 1 X 10(6) ohm-cm2. The closeness of these two values of Rm is paralleled in the other three types of red cells (even though the absolute values of Rm vary among the four types by a factor of 10), indicating that the net current flow across the membrane can be accounted for by the net transport of Na by the pump.
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Castranova V, Weise MJ, Hoffman JF. Anion transport in dog, cat, and human red cells. Effects of varying cell volume and Donnan ratio. J Gen Physiol 1979; 74:319-34. [PMID: 479824 PMCID: PMC2228527 DOI: 10.1085/jgp.74.3.319] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/15/2022] Open
Abstract
Membrane potential and the rate constants for anion self-exchange in dog, cat, and human red blood cells have been shown to vary with cell volume. For dog and cat red cells, the outward rate constants for SO4 and Cl increase while the inward rate constant for SO4 decreases as cells swell or shrink. These changes coincide with the membrane potential becoming more negative as a result of changes in cell volume. Human red cells exhibit a similar change in the rate constants for SO4 and Cl efflux in response to cell swelling, but shrunken cells exhibit a decreased rate constant for SO4 efflux and a more positive membrane potential. Hyperpolarization of shrunken dog and cat red cells is due to a volume-dependent rate constant for SO4 efflux and a more positive membrane potential. Hyperpolarization of shrunken dog and cat red cells is due to a volume-dependent increase in PNa. If this increase in PNa is prevented by ATP depletion or if the outward Na gradient is removed, the response to shrinking is identical to human red cells. These results suggest that the volume dependence of anion permeability may be secondary to changes in the anion equilibrium ratio which in red cells is reflected by the membrane potential. When the membrane potential and cell volume of human red cells were varied independently by a method involving pretreatment with nystatin, it was found that the rate of anion transport (for SO4 and Cl) does not vary with cell volume but rather with membrane potential (anion equilibrium ratio); that is, the rate constant for anion efflux is decreased and that for influx is increased as the membrane potential becomes more positive (internal anion concentration increases) while the opposite is true with membrane hyperpolarization (a fall in internal anion concentration).
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Forbush B, Hoffman JF. Direct photoaffinity labeling of the primary region of the ouabain binding site of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase with [3H]ouabain, [3H]digitoxin and [3H]digitoxigenin. BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA 1979; 555:299-306. [PMID: 224926 DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(79)90169-x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 15] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/13/2022]
Abstract
The tritiated cardiotonic steroids, ouabain, digitoxin, and digitoxigenin are shown to photolabel the large polypeptide but not the glycoprotein or proteolipid component of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase when they are bound to the inhibitory site and exposed to light of 220 or 254 nm. The extent of photolabeling is low, less than 1%, and is limited by photocross-linking of the enzyme. The mechanism of photoincorporation does not appear to be either photolysis of the lactone ring in ouabain or photolysis of tryptophan or tyrosine residues in the polypeptide.
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Freedman JC, Hoffman JF. Ionic and osmotic equilibria of human red blood cells treated with nystatin. J Gen Physiol 1979; 74:157-85. [PMID: 490141 PMCID: PMC2228501 DOI: 10.1085/jgp.74.2.157] [Citation(s) in RCA: 152] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/15/2022] Open
Abstract
Human red blood cells have been incubated in the presence of nystatin, which allows Na and K, as well as Cl and pH to equilibrate rapidly when cell volume is set with external impermeant sucrose. The intracellular mean ionic activity coefficients, relative to values in the extracellular solution, for KCl and NaCl are 1.01 +/- 0.02 and 0.99 +/- 0.02 (SD, n = 10), respectively, and are independent of external pH, pH o, and of [sucrose]o. With nystatin the dependence of red cell volume on [sucrose]o deviates from ideal osmotic behavior by as much as a factor of three. A virial equation for the osmotic coefficient, phi, of human hemoglobin, Hb, accounts for the cell volumes, and is the same as that which describes Adair's measurements of phi Hb for Hb isolated from sheep and ox bloods. In the presence of nystatin the slope of the acid-base titration curve of the cells is independent of cell volume, implying that the charge on impermeant cellular solutes is independent of Hb concentration at constant pH. By modifying the Jacobs-stewart equations (1947. J. Cell. Comp. Physiol. 30: 79--103) with the osmotic coefficients of Hb and of salts, a nonideal thermodynamic model has been devised which predicts equilibrium Donnan ratios and red cell volume from the composition of the extracellular solution and from certain parameters of the cells. In addition to accounting for the dependence of cell volume on osmotic pressure, the model also describes accurately the dependence of Donnan ratios and cell volumes on pHo either in the presence or absence of nystatin.
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Castranova V, Weise MJ, Hoffman JF. Characteristics of anion transport in cat and dog red blood cells. J Membr Biol 1979; 49:57-74. [PMID: 480338 DOI: 10.1007/bf01871039] [Citation(s) in RCA: 3] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/15/2022]
Abstract
Self-exchange of chloride and sulfate in dog and cat red cells has been measured under equilibrium conditions. The rats of efflux for these anions are approximately twofold higher in dog compared to cat red blood cells. Although the rates differ, the anion exchange systems of these two red cell types exhibit many common properties. The dependence of 35SO4 efflux on the intracellular SO4 concentration, the pH dependence and the inhibition of 35SO4 efflux by Cl and SITS are almost identical in dog and cat red cells. Nystatin treatment was used to study the dependence of 36Cl efflux on internal Cl. Chloride efflux exhibits saturation in both cell types with dog red cells possessing a higher Vmax and K1/2 than cat red cells. The number of anion transport sites was estimated by extrapolation to the number of molecules of dihydro DIDS (H2DIDS, where DIDS is 4,4'-diisothiocyano-2,2' stilbene-disulfonic acid) which were bound at 100% inhibition of transport. The results indicate that either the turnover numbers for anion transport differ in dog, cat, and human red cells or that there is heterogeneity in the function of the membrane components which bind H2DIDS.
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