We have measured CO2 fluxes across phosphate solutions at different carbonic anhydrase concentrations, bicarbonate concentration gradients, phosphate concentrations, and mobilities. Temperature was 22-25 degrees C, the pH of the phosphate solutions was 7.0-7.3. We found that under physiological conditions of pH and pCO2 a facilitated diffusion of CO2 occurs in addition to free diffusion when (a) sufficient carbonic anhydrase is present, and (b) a concentration gradient of HCO3- is established along with a pCO2 gradient, and (c) the phosphate buffer has a mobility comparable to that of bicarbonate. When the phosphate was immobilized by attaching 0.25-mm-long cellulose particles, no facilitation of CO2 diffusion was detectable. A mechanism of facilitated CO2 diffusion in phosphate solutions analogous to that in albumin solutions was proposed on the basis of these findings: bicarbonate diffusion together with a facilitated proton transport by phosphate diffusion. A mathematical model of this mechanism was formulated. The CO2 fluxed predicted by the model agree quantitatively with the experimentally determined fluxes. It is concluded that a highly effective proton transport mechanism acts in solutions of mobile phosphate buffers. By this mechanism; CO2 transfer may be increased up to fivefold and proton transfer may be increased to 10,000-fold.
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1 June 1976
Article|
June 01 1976
Proton transport by phosphate diffusion--a mechanism of facilitated CO2 transfer.
G Gros
W Moll
H Hoppe
H Gros
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
J Gen Physiol (1976) 67 (6): 773–790.
Citation
G Gros, W Moll, H Hoppe, H Gros; Proton transport by phosphate diffusion--a mechanism of facilitated CO2 transfer.. J Gen Physiol 1 June 1976; 67 (6): 773–790. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.67.6.773
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