Publication | Open Access
Chloride Transport in Porous Lipid Bilayer Membranes
10
Citations
29
References
1973
Year
Membrane FormationMedicineMembrane TransportChloride TransportMembrane ConductanceTransport PhenomenaNet Chloride FluxesLipid MovementMembrane PermeationPharmacologyBiophysicsLipid Bilayer Membranes
This paper describes dissipative Cl(-) transport in "porous" lipid bilayer membranes, i.e., cholesterol-containing membranes exposed to 1-3 x 10(-7) M amphotericin B. P(DCl) (cm.s(-1)), the diffusional permeability coefficient for Cl(-), estimated from unidirectional (36)Cl(-) fluxes at zero volume flow, varied linearly with the membrane conductance (Gm, ohm(-1).cm(-2)) when the contributions of unstirred layers to the resistance to tracer diffusion were relatively small with respect to the membranes; in 0.05 M NaCl, P(DCl) was 1.36 x 10(-4) cm.s(-1) when Gm was 0.02 ohm(-1).cm(-2). Net chloride fluxes were measured either in the presence of imposed concentration gradients or electrical potential differences. Under both sets of conditions: the values of P(DCl) computed from zero volume flow experiments described net chloride fluxes; the net chloride fluxes accounted for approximately 90-95% of the membrane current density; and, the chloride flux ratio conformed to the Ussing independence relationship. Thus, it is likely that Cl(-) traversed aqueous pores in these anion-permselective membranes via a simple diffusion process. The zero current membrane potentials measured when the aqueous phases contained asymmetrical NaCl solutions could be expressed in terms of the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz constant field equation, assuming that the P(DNa)/P(DCl) ratio was 0.05. In symmetrical salt solutions, the current-voltage properties of these membranes were linear; in asymmetrical NaCl solutions, the membranes exhibited electrical rectification consistent with constant-field theory. It seems likely that the space charge density in these porous membranes is sufficiently low that the potential gradient within the membranes is approximately linear; and, that the pores are not electrically neutral, presumably because the Debye length within the membrane phase approximates the membrane thickness.
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