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The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 62, 147-156, Copyright © 1973 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

Dog Red Blood Cells

Adjustment of salt and water content in vitro



John C. Parker 1

1 From the Division of Hematology, Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514

Dog red blood cells (RBC) lack a ouabain-sensitive sodium pump, and yet they are capable of volume regulation in vivo. The present study was designed to find in vitro conditions under which dog RBC could transport sodium outward, against an electrochemical gradient. Cells were first loaded with sodium chloride and water by preincubation in hypertonic saline. They were then incubated at 37°C in media containing physiologic concentrations of sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate, glucose, and calcium. The cells returned to a normal salt and water content in 16–20 h. Without calcium in the medium the cells continued slowly to accumulate sodium. Removal of glucose caused rapid swelling and lysis, whether or not calcium was present. The net efflux of sodium showed a close relationship to medium calcium over a concentration range from 0 to 5 mM. Extrusion of salt and water was also demonstrated in fresh RBC (no hypertonic preincubation) when calcium levels in the media were sufficiently raised. The ion and water movements in these experiments were not influenced by ouabain or by removal of extracellular potassium. Magnesium could not substitute for calcium. It is concluded that dog RBC have an energy-dependent mechanism for extruding sodium chloride which requires external calcium and is quite distinct from the sodium-potassium exchange pump.

Submitted on April 2, 1973


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C. M. Baumgarten
Cell Volume Regulation in Cardiac Myocytes: A Leaky Boat Gets a New Bilge Pump
J. Gen. Physiol., November 1, 2006; 128(5): 487 - 489.
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