The turtle urinary bladder acidifies the contents of its lumen by actively transporting protons. H+ secretion by the isolated bladder was measured simultaneously with the rate of 14CO2 evolution from [14C]glucose. The application of an adverse pH gradient resulted in a decline in the rate of H+ secretion (JH) and in the rate of glucose oxidation (JCO2). The changes in JH and JCO2 were linear functions of the pH difference across the membrane. Hence, JH and JCO2 were linearly related to each other. The slope, deltaJH/deltaJCO2 was found to be similar in half-bladders from the same animal but was seen to vary widely in a population of turtles. To investigate the effect of pH gradients on deltaJH/deltaJCO2, two experiments were performed in each of 14 hemibladders. In one, JH and JCO2 were altered by changing the luminal pH. In the other, they were altered by changing the ambient pCO2 while the luminal pH was kept constant. The average slope, deltaJH/deltaJCO2, in the presence of pH gradients was 14.45 eq-mol-1. In the absence of gradients in the same hemibladders it was 14.72, delta = 0.27 +/- 1.46. The results show that H+ transport is organized in such a way that leaks to protons in parallel to the pump are negligible. Analysis of the transport system by use of the Essig-Caplan linear irreversible thermodynamic formalism shows that the system is tightly coupled. The degree of coupling, q, given by that analysis was measured and found to be at or very near the maximum theoretical value.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
1 October 1976
Article|
October 01 1976
Active H+ transport in the turtle urinary bladder. Coupling of transport to glucose oxidation.
R Beauwens
,
Q Al-Awqati
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
J Gen Physiol (1976) 68 (4): 421–439.
Citation
R Beauwens, Q Al-Awqati; Active H+ transport in the turtle urinary bladder. Coupling of transport to glucose oxidation.. J Gen Physiol 1 October 1976; 68 (4): 421–439. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.68.4.421
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Could not validate captcha. Please try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your InstitutionSuggested Content
Intrinsic characteristics of the proton pump in the luminal membrane of a tight urinary epithelium. The relation between transport rate and delta mu H.
J Gen Physiol (August,1985)
Effects of Dinitrophenol and Oligomycin on the Coupling between Anaerobic Metabolism and Anaerobic Sodium Transport by the Isolated Turtle Bladder
J Gen Physiol (January,1966)
A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides
J Gen Physiol (September,1968)
Email alerts
Advertisement