Chlormadinone acetate, a progesterone derivative that binds to the digitalis receptor, inhibits the sodium pump in the isolated rat diaphragm

1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Bihler ◽  
Frank S. LaBella ◽  
P. C. Sawh

Rb+ uptake, intracellular Na+ and K+ levels, and the tissue–medium distribution of the nonmetabolized glucose analog, 3-O-methyl-D-glucose (3-MG) were measured in rat diaphragms incubated with chiormadinone acetate, 6-chloro-4,6-pregnadien-17-ol-3,20-dione 17-acetate (CMA), in the presence and absence of ouabain. CMA in concentrations of 5 × 10−7 M or higher significantly depressed 86Rb uptake, and promoted an increase in internal Na+ and a decrease in internal K+, indicating inhibition of the sodium pump. Sugar transport in resting muscle parallels the changes in internal Na+ levels and is an additional indicator of sodium pump activity. Equilibration of 3-MG between tissue and medium was accelerated by CMA, in parallel to the rise in internal Na+ level. Effects of CMA on Na+ levels and sugar transport, but not on Rb+ uptake, were additive to those of various concentrations of ouabain, suggesting interaction with sites not affected by ouabain. These results on diaphragm muscle confirm our previous studies on isolated cardiac muscle preparations showing that CMA, added to the aqueous bathing medium, inhibits the sodium pump in intact muscle tissues.

1967 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 677-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilbert N. Ling ◽  
Marsha H. Kromash

The volume occupied by the extracellular space has been investigated in six types of voluntary muscles: sartorius (frog), semitendinosus (frog), tibialis anticus longus (frog), iliofibularis (frog), rectus abdominis (frog), and diaphragm (rat). With the aid of four types of probe material, three of which are conventionally employed (inulin, sorbitol, sucrose) and one of which is newly introduced (poly-L-glutamate), and a different experimental method, we have demonstrated that the "true" extracellular space of frog sartorius, semitendinosus, tibialis anticus longus, and iliofibularis muscle and of rat diaphragm muscle is equal to, or probably less than, 8–9% (v/w) of the tissue. The frog rectus muscle shows a somewhat higher ceiling value of 14%.


Endocrinology ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 105 (2) ◽  
pp. 452-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. G. P. ISAKSSON ◽  
JESSICA SCHWARTZ ◽  
JACK L. KOSTYO ◽  
CHARLES R. REAGAN

1967 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 645-662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Å. Hjalmarson ◽  
K. Ahrén

ABSTRACT The effect of growth hormone (GH) in vitro on the rate of intracellular accumulation of the non-utilizable amino acid α-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB) was studied in the intact rat diaphragm preparation. Bovine or ovine GH (25 μg/ml incubation medium) markedly stimulated the accumulation of AIB-14C by diaphragms from hypophysectomized rats, while there was no or only a very slight effect on diaphragms from normal rats. In diaphragms from rats with the pituitary gland autotransplanted to the kidney capsule GH in vitro stimulated the accumulation of AIB-14C significantly more than in diaphragms from normal rats but significantly less than in diaphragms from hypophysectomized rats. Injections of GH intramuscularly for 4 days to hypophysectomized rats made the diaphragms from these rats less sensitive or completely insensitive to GH in vitro. These results indicate strongly that the relative insensitivity to GH in vitro of diaphragms from normal rats is due to the fact that the muscle tissues from these rats has been exposed to the endogenously secreted GH. The results show that GH can influence the accumulation of AIB-14C in the isolated rat diaphragm in two different ways giving an acute or »stimulatory« effect and a late or »inhibitory« effect, and that it seems to be a time-relationship between these two effects of the hormone.


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