Publication | Open Access
The effect of the internal sodium concentration on calcium fluxes in isolated guinea‐pig auricles
327
Citations
21
References
1970
Year
Internal Sodium ConcentrationCellular PhysiologyElectrolyte DisturbanceCalcium FluxesCalcium EffluxOsmoregulationBiophysicsMineral MetabolismHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyOsmotic StressSodium HomeostasisIon ChannelsMembrane BiologyPharmacologySaturation KineticsIsolated Guinea‐pig AuriclesGuinea-pig AuriclesPhysiologyElectrophysiologyMedicine
1. Calcium efflux from guinea-pig auricles followed saturation kinetics when [Ca](o) and [Na](o) were changed while the ratio [Ca](o)/[Na](o) (2) was kept constant. The Michaelis constant, K(m) (Ca+Na) = 40 mM, suggests that a hypothetical carrier system, responsible for sodium-calcium exchange, is far from saturation with the inside concentrations of these ions.2. [Na](i) was altered in the auricles between 12.5 and 60 mM/kg fibre water while total cellular calcium concentration ([Ca](t)) at the beginning of the influx period was not significantly different in the various groups of preparations.3. (45)Ca influx increased appreciably with increasing [Na](i). (45)Ca influx from sodium-poor solution corresponded to an almost equal increase in [Ca](t), while [Ca](t) did not change much in preparations loaded with (45)Ca in Tyrode solution. When the sodium-activated fraction of calcium influx was plotted against [Na](i) (2) the resulting curve indicated saturation with K(m) (Na) = 3500 (mM [Na](i))(2) and maximal influx rate, J(i, max) (Ca') = 1.35 mM/kg wet weight x 10 min.4. When the preparations were re-equilibrated for various times in normal Tyrode solution after [Na](i) had been increased, both the sodium-activated component of calcium influx and [Na](i) (2) decreased with approximately the same rate constants.5. Calcium efflux from auricles with high [Na](i) was increased when it was measured in Tyrode solution while the efflux in sodium-poor solution was inhibited.6. Auricles with increased [Na](i) showed a positive inotropic contractile response.7. The main conclusion reached by these experiments is that calcium influx is affected by [Na](i) in a way which is compatible with a carrier-mediated sodium-calcium exchange system.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1