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Sodium Extrusion by A Fish Acclimated to Sea Water: Physiological and Biochemical Description OF A Na-For-K Exchange System
42
Citations
25
References
1973
Year
Animal PhysiologyPotassium IonsAquacultural EngineeringFish AcclimatedSodium ExtrusionOsmoregulationSodium HomeostasisMedicinePhysiologyAquaculture SystemElectrolyte DisturbanceSea WaterElectrophysiologyExternal Potassium IonsMarine BiologyMetabolismPharmacologyPotassium Homeostasis
ABSTRACT The effect of external potassium ions on the extrusion of sodium ions by the seawater-acclimated fat sleeper, Dormitator maculatus, was investigated. Removal of external potassium ions reduced the efflux of sodium from the fish by 22% while addition of io-4 M ouabain reduced the efflux of sodium ions by 14%. Addition of potassium ions to distilled-water baths into which fish were rapidly transferred stimulated sodium extrusion in a manner which could be described by the Michaelis-Menten equation. The Km of this potassium-stimulated sodium efflux was approximately 2 mm-K/1. The calculated rate of sodium extrusion was 10 times the oral ingestion of sodium ions. Biochemical assays of the levels of the enzyme Na-K-activated ATPase extracted from gill tissue determined that seawater-acclimated fish had 3 times the enzymic activity that fish acclimated to freshwater had. In vitro potassium stimulation of the extracted Na-K-activated ATPase showed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with a Km of approximately 2 mm-K/1. It is concluded that the extrusion of sodium ions by Dormitator maculatus acclimated to sea water is coupled with potassium uptake and is mediated by the enzyme Na-K-activated ATPase.
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