We studied unidirectional [14C]HCO3- efflux from human resealed red cell ghosts with 1 mM acetazolamide under self-exchange conditions at pH = pH(i = o) 7.4-9.0 and 0-38 degrees C by means of the Millipore-Swinnex and continuous flow tube filtering techniques. 14CO2 loss from cells to efflux medium and further to the atmosphere was insignificant. [14C]HCO3- efflux was determined at pH 7.8, 38 degrees C under symmetric variation of the HCO3- concentrations (C(i = o)), and asymmetric conditions: C(i) varied, C(o) constant, or C(o) varied, C(i) constant. MM-fit, Jeff = Jmaxeff x C x (C + K1/2)-1, used to describe the concentration dependence of Jeff,o when only C(o) varied, yields at C(i) = 50 mM: K1/2o = 3.8 mMJ, Jmaxeff.o = 20 nmol cm-2 s-1; at C(i) = 165 mM: K1/2o = 10 mM, Jmaxeff.o = 32 nmol cm-2 s-1. When C(i) varied, noncompetitive self inhibition by HCO3- binding (inhibitor constant K1) to an intracellular site was included (MS-fit). Under conditions of (a) symmetry: C(i = o) = 9-600 mM, K1/2s = 173 mM, K1 = 172 mM, and Jmaxeff,s = 120 nmol cm-2 s-1, (b) asymmetry: C(o) = 50 mM, K1/2i = 116 mM, K1 = 136 mM, and Jmaxeff,i = 92 nmol cm-2 s-1. All flux parameters accord with the ping-pong model for anion exchange. The data for C(i) < 200 mM also fit well to the MM equation, but K1/2 and Jmaxeff are different from the MS-fit and are inconsistent with the ping-pong model. Thus, self-inhibition (MS-fit) must be included even at low concentrations. As at 0 degree C, the system is asymmetric: 8-10 times more unloaded transport sites face inward than outward when C(i = o). Jeff,s was not mono-exponentially dependent on temperature at 0-38 degrees C, indicating that the transmembrane anion transport is controlled by several rate constants with different temperature dependencies. Jeff,s was not significantly affected by increasing pH(i = o) from 7.4 to 7.8, but it decreased by 50% when pH was raised to 9.0.
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1 December 1996
Article|
December 01 1996
Kinetics of bicarbonate transport in human red blood cell membranes at body temperature.
P K Gasbjerg,
P K Gasbjerg
Department of Medical Physiology, Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
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P A Knauf,
P A Knauf
Department of Medical Physiology, Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
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J Brahm
J Brahm
Department of Medical Physiology, Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
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P K Gasbjerg
Department of Medical Physiology, Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
P A Knauf
Department of Medical Physiology, Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
J Brahm
Department of Medical Physiology, Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
J Gen Physiol (1996) 108 (6): 565–575.
Citation
P K Gasbjerg, P A Knauf, J Brahm; Kinetics of bicarbonate transport in human red blood cell membranes at body temperature.. J Gen Physiol 1 December 1996; 108 (6): 565–575. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.108.6.565
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