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MICRURGICAL STUDIES IN CELL PHYSIOLOGY : III. THE ACTION OF CO(2)AND SOME SALTS OF NA, CA, AND K ON THE PROTOPLASM OF AMŒBA DUBIA.

I. Plasmalemma. 1. Of the salts used in these experiments the anions have only a modifying effect on the cations. The dispersive action of Na and, to a lesser extent, of K, predominates. Borate increases the toxicity of Na and acetate decreases it. 2. CO(2) and carbonates dissolve the plasmalemma re...

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Autores principales: Reznikoff, Paul, Chambers, Robert
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1927
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2140933/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19872357
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author Reznikoff, Paul
Chambers, Robert
author_facet Reznikoff, Paul
Chambers, Robert
author_sort Reznikoff, Paul
collection PubMed
description I. Plasmalemma. 1. Of the salts used in these experiments the anions have only a modifying effect on the cations. The dispersive action of Na and, to a lesser extent, of K, predominates. Borate increases the toxicity of Na and acetate decreases it. 2. CO(2) and carbonates dissolve the plasmalemma readily. 3. Na lactate tends to dissolve the surface especially when brought into contact with it from the interior by injection. Lactate antagonizes the stimulating effect of Ca on the plasmalemma. II. The Internal Protoplasm. 4. Acid phosphate of Na and K, when injected, causes a membrane to form around the granular endoplasm within the ameba. 5. Na borate increases the toxicity of Na inside the cell. 6. Bubbles of CO(2), injected into the cell, cause an increase of fluidity of the internal protoplasm. These bubbles shrink and disappear from the cell more readily than air bubbles. 7. The anions modify the typical cation effect. Carbonates accentuate the liquefying and solvent action of Na. Phosphates prevent a complete rounding of the ameba caused by Na. Lactate inhibits the solidification and pinching off effect caused by Ca. III. Physiological Significance of Salts. 8. The buffer salts can be injected in high concentrations without toxic effects but amebæ can be immersed in them only in very dilute solutions without injury. 9. The inhibiting action of lactate and the dispersive effect of CO(2), carbonates, and lactate on the plasma membrane, must be of importance in a consideration of the functions of the organism and perhaps in the production of pathological changes.
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spelling pubmed-21409332008-04-23 MICRURGICAL STUDIES IN CELL PHYSIOLOGY : III. THE ACTION OF CO(2)AND SOME SALTS OF NA, CA, AND K ON THE PROTOPLASM OF AMŒBA DUBIA. Reznikoff, Paul Chambers, Robert J Gen Physiol Article I. Plasmalemma. 1. Of the salts used in these experiments the anions have only a modifying effect on the cations. The dispersive action of Na and, to a lesser extent, of K, predominates. Borate increases the toxicity of Na and acetate decreases it. 2. CO(2) and carbonates dissolve the plasmalemma readily. 3. Na lactate tends to dissolve the surface especially when brought into contact with it from the interior by injection. Lactate antagonizes the stimulating effect of Ca on the plasmalemma. II. The Internal Protoplasm. 4. Acid phosphate of Na and K, when injected, causes a membrane to form around the granular endoplasm within the ameba. 5. Na borate increases the toxicity of Na inside the cell. 6. Bubbles of CO(2), injected into the cell, cause an increase of fluidity of the internal protoplasm. These bubbles shrink and disappear from the cell more readily than air bubbles. 7. The anions modify the typical cation effect. Carbonates accentuate the liquefying and solvent action of Na. Phosphates prevent a complete rounding of the ameba caused by Na. Lactate inhibits the solidification and pinching off effect caused by Ca. III. Physiological Significance of Salts. 8. The buffer salts can be injected in high concentrations without toxic effects but amebæ can be immersed in them only in very dilute solutions without injury. 9. The inhibiting action of lactate and the dispersive effect of CO(2), carbonates, and lactate on the plasma membrane, must be of importance in a consideration of the functions of the organism and perhaps in the production of pathological changes. The Rockefeller University Press 1927-05-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2140933/ /pubmed/19872357 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1927, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Reznikoff, Paul
Chambers, Robert
MICRURGICAL STUDIES IN CELL PHYSIOLOGY : III. THE ACTION OF CO(2)AND SOME SALTS OF NA, CA, AND K ON THE PROTOPLASM OF AMŒBA DUBIA.
title MICRURGICAL STUDIES IN CELL PHYSIOLOGY : III. THE ACTION OF CO(2)AND SOME SALTS OF NA, CA, AND K ON THE PROTOPLASM OF AMŒBA DUBIA.
title_full MICRURGICAL STUDIES IN CELL PHYSIOLOGY : III. THE ACTION OF CO(2)AND SOME SALTS OF NA, CA, AND K ON THE PROTOPLASM OF AMŒBA DUBIA.
title_fullStr MICRURGICAL STUDIES IN CELL PHYSIOLOGY : III. THE ACTION OF CO(2)AND SOME SALTS OF NA, CA, AND K ON THE PROTOPLASM OF AMŒBA DUBIA.
title_full_unstemmed MICRURGICAL STUDIES IN CELL PHYSIOLOGY : III. THE ACTION OF CO(2)AND SOME SALTS OF NA, CA, AND K ON THE PROTOPLASM OF AMŒBA DUBIA.
title_short MICRURGICAL STUDIES IN CELL PHYSIOLOGY : III. THE ACTION OF CO(2)AND SOME SALTS OF NA, CA, AND K ON THE PROTOPLASM OF AMŒBA DUBIA.
title_sort micrurgical studies in cell physiology : iii. the action of co(2)and some salts of na, ca, and k on the protoplasm of amœba dubia.
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2140933/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19872357
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