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Sodium Extrusion and Potassium Uptake in Guinea Pig Kidney Cortex Slices
Slices from the cortex corticis of the guinea pig kidney were immersed in a chilled solution without K and then reimmersed in warmer solutions. The Na and K concentrations and the membrane potential V(m) were then studied as a function of the Na and K concentrations of the reimmersion fluid. It was...
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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The Rockefeller University Press
1965
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Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2195429/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14324983 |
Sumario: | Slices from the cortex corticis of the guinea pig kidney were immersed in a chilled solution without K and then reimmersed in warmer solutions. The Na and K concentrations and the membrane potential V(m) were then studied as a function of the Na and K concentrations of the reimmersion fluid. It was found that Na is extruded from the cells against a large electrochemical potential gradient. Q(10) for net Na outflux was ∼2.5. At bath K concentrations larger than 8 mM the behavior of K was largely passive. At the outset of reimmersion (V(m) > E(K)) K influx seemed secondary to Na extrusion. Na extrusion would promote K entrance, being limited and requiring the presence of K in the bathing fluid. At bath K concentrations below 8 mM, K influx was up an electrochemical potential gradient. Thus a parallel active K uptake is apparent. Q(10) for net K influx was ∼2.0. Dinitrophenol inhibited net Na outflux and net K influx, Q(10) became <1.1 for both fluxes. The ratio between these fluxes varied. Thus at the outset of reimmersion the net Na outflux to net K influx ratio was >1. After 8 minutes it was <1. |
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