scholarly journals Untersuchungen über den Kaliumtransport bei Escherichia coli B / Potassium Transport in Escherichia coli B

1972 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Pilwat ◽  
U. Zimmermann

The stationary intracellular potassium concentration in E. coli B 525 has been studied as a function of the extracellular potassium and sodium concentrations.The ratio of extracellular to intracellular potassium concentration is shown to be a linear function of the extracellular potassium concentration if the extracellular sodium concentration is low (20 mmoles/l). In the case of high sodium concentration (100 mmoles/l) the ratio is independent of the extracellular potassium concentration if the potassium concentration is below 1,2 mmoles/l.In order to describe the distribution of potassium uniformly over the whole range of the extracellular potassium and sodium concentrations a carrier system with two sites has to be supposed.

1983 ◽  
Vol 244 (2) ◽  
pp. H247-H252 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. C. Vary ◽  
J. R. Neely

In heart muscle, the intracellular carnitine concentration is approximately 40 times higher than the plasma carnitine concentration, suggesting the existence of an active transport process. At physiological serum carnitine concentrations (44 microM), 80% of total myocardial carnitine uptake occurs via a carrier-mediated transport system. The mechanism of this carrier-mediated transport was studied in isolated perfused rat hearts. Carnitine transport showed an absolute dependence on the extracellular sodium concentration. The rate of carnitine transport was linearly related to the perfusate sodium concentration at every perfusate carnitine concentration examined (15-100 microM). Total removal of extracellular sodium completely abolished the carrier-mediated transport. Decreasing the perfusate potassium concentration from a control of 5.9 to 0.6 mM stimulated transport by 35%, whereas increasing the extracellular potassium concentration from 5.9 to 25 mM reduced transport by 60%. The carrier-mediated transport was inversely proportional to the extracellular potassium concentration. Acetylcholine (10(-3) M), isoproterenol (10(-7) M), or ouabain (10(-3) did not alter the rate of carnitine transport. Addition of tetrodotoxin (10(-5) stimulated carnitine transport by about 40%, while gramicidin S (5 X 10(-6) M) decreased uptake by about 18% relative to control. The data provide evidence that carnitine transport by cardiac cells occurs by a Na+-dependent cotransport mechanism that is dependent on the Na+ electrochemical gradient.


1968 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 666-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Billy K. Yeh ◽  
Brian F. Hoffman

The intracellular sodium concentration reported for young, embryonic chick hearts is extremely high and decreases progressively throughout the embryonic period, reaching a value of 43 mM immediately before hatching. This observation suggested that the ionic basis for excitation in embryonic chick heart may differ from that responsible for electrical activity of the adult organ. This hypothesis was tested by recording transmembrane resting and action potentials on hearts isolated from 6-day and 19-day chick embryos and varying the extracellular sodium and potassium concentrations. The results show that for both young and old embryonic cardiac cells the resting potential depends primarily on the extracellular potassium concentration and the amplitude and rate of rise of the action potential depend primarily on the extracellular sodium concentration.


1968 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 666-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Billy K. Yeh ◽  
Brian F. Hoffman

The intracellular sodium concentration reported for young, embryonic chick hearts is extremely high and decreases progressively throughout the embryonic period, reaching a value of 43 mM immediately before hatching. This observation suggested that the ionic basis for excitation in embryonic chick heart may differ from that responsible for electrical activity of the adult organ. This hypothesis was tested by recording transmembrane resting and action potentials on hearts isolated from 6-day and 19-day chick embryos and varying the extracellular sodium and potassium concentrations. The results show that for both young and old embryonic cardiac cells the resting potential depends primarily on the extracellular potassium concentration and the amplitude and rate of rise of the action potential depend primarily on the extracellular sodium concentration.


2014 ◽  
Vol 112 (10) ◽  
pp. 2572-2579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yujie T. Tang ◽  
Jorge M. Mendez ◽  
Jeremy J. Theriot ◽  
Punam M. Sawant ◽  
Héctor E. López-Valdés ◽  
...  

Cortical spreading depression (CSD) occurs during various forms of brain injury such as stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and brain trauma, but it is also thought to be the mechanism of the migraine aura. It is therefore expected to occur over a range of conditions including the awake behaving state. Yet it is unclear how such a massive depolarization could occur under relatively benign conditions. Using a microfluidic device with focal stimulation capability in a mouse brain slice model, we varied extracellular potassium concentration as well as the area exposed to increased extracellular potassium to determine the minimum conditions necessary to elicit CSD. Importantly, we focused on potassium levels that are physiologically plausible (≤145 mM; the intracellular potassium concentration). We found a strong correlation between the threshold concentration and the slice area exposed to increased extracellular potassium: minimum area of exposure was needed with the highest potassium concentration, while larger areas were needed at lower concentrations. We also found that moderate elevations of extracellular potassium were able to elicit CSD in relatively small estimated tissue volumes that might be activated under noninjury conditions. Our results thus show that CSD may be inducible under the conditions that expected in migraine aura as well as those related to brain trauma.


1955 ◽  
Vol 38 (6) ◽  
pp. 867-888 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ernst G. Huf ◽  
Joyce P. Wills ◽  
Mary F. Arrighi

1. The "chloride space" in frog skin was determined and found to be 69.7 per cent by weight of wet skin. The chloride space occupies about 94 per cent of the total water space of skin. From this and other information, it appears that the "non-chloride space" measures only a part of the space occupied by the structural elements of skin. This space is referred to here as the intracellular compartment and the remainder as the extracellular compartment of frog skin. On this basis, potassium and sodium in skin are distributed as follows: total sodium, 60 to 75 µeq./gm. of wet skin; all sodium is probably extracellular; total potassium, 39 to 49 µeq./gm.; intracellular potassium, 37 to 47 µeq./gm. 2. Skins were immersed in solutions differing from each other in their sodium and potassium concentrations. Three levels of NaCl were studied: 48, 119, and 169 µeq./ml. For each of these solutions (referred to below as diluted, physiological, and concentrated saline), the potassium levels were varied from 0.1 to 20 µeq./ml. For skins in solutions low in potassium and high in sodium, it was found that an exchange of intracellular potassium against extracellular sodium occurs. The ratio for the number of potassium ions lost/number of sodium ions gained was 4:1,4:6, and 4:8 for skin in K+-free diluted, physiological, and concentrated saline, respectively. 3. Uptake of NaCl by the epithelium of frog skin is dependent on the potassium concentration of the environment. For skins in physiological saline, net uptake of NaCl was optimal (0.90 µeq. x cm.–2 x hr.–1) at 1 to 5 µeq. K+/ml. For skins in diluted and concentrated saline optimal NaCl uptake was seen at potassium concentrations of approximately 5 and 10 µeq. K+/ml., respectively. Net uptake of NaCl by the skin is also discussed, with relation to the potassium balance of skin. 4. Skin potentials decreased with increasing extracellular potassium concentration when diluted saline solutions were used. The opposite of this was found for skins in concentrated saline. For skins in physiological saline, skin potentials rose sharply from rather low values, when placed in solutions very low in potassium, to relatively high values, when immersed in solutions containing 1 to 5 µeq. K+/ml. Further increase in potassium concentration of the bath led to slight reductions in skin potentials. The highest potentials observed were of the order of 40 mv. In all cases studied, the inside was positive with relation to the outside. 5. It can be shown that values for intracellular potassium concentration as a function of extracellular potassium concentration satisfy, at a first but good approximation, Freundlich's isotherm. A modification of Freundlich's isotherm, recently introduced by Sips, may also be used to correlate the experimental data quantitatively. Since the latter isotherm has a rational interpretation, it is suggested that this be used, rather than Freundlich's isotherm, to express quantitatively the dependence of intracellular on extracellular potassium in frog skin.


Author(s):  
J Firth

The normal range of potassium concentration in serum is 3.5 to 5.0 mmol/litre and within cells it is 150 to 160 mmol/litre, the ratio of intracellular to extracellular potassium concentration being a critical determinant of cellular resting membrane potential and thereby of the function of excitable tissues....


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