Cell contents of water, K, Na, and Cl have been determined in cat right ventricular papillary muscles immersed in solutions with and without NaCl when the external osmolality was varied with sucrose. The plot of cell water/kilogram dry weight (corrected for sucrose content) vs. (external osmolality)-1 suggests that not less than 82% of water present in cells at physiological external osmolality is free to move across the cell membrane in response to an imposed osmotic gradient. Cells fail to increase their water content in very hypotonic solutions. For osmolalities greater than 5 times isosmolal, at which the mannitol space and the Cl36 space are both equal to 100% of muscle water, rather large amounts of univalent cation appear to remain "bound" to the tissue.
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1 March 1966
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March 01 1966
Cat Heart Muscle in Vitro : IX. Cell ion and water contents in anisosmolal solutions
Ernest Page,
Ernest Page
From the Biophysical Laboratory, Harvard Medical School, Boston.
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S. R. Storm
S. R. Storm
From the Biophysical Laboratory, Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Search for other works by this author on:
Ernest Page
From the Biophysical Laboratory, Harvard Medical School, Boston.
S. R. Storm
From the Biophysical Laboratory, Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Dr. Page's present address is the Departments of Medicine and Physiology, University of Chicago
Received:
March 29 1965
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
Copyright © 1966 by The Rockefeller University Press
1966
J Gen Physiol (1966) 49 (4): 641–653.
Article history
Received:
March 29 1965
Citation
Ernest Page, S. R. Storm; Cat Heart Muscle in Vitro : IX. Cell ion and water contents in anisosmolal solutions . J Gen Physiol 1 March 1966; 49 (4): 641–653. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.49.4.641
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