Prolytic Ion Exchanges Produced in Human Red Cells by Methanol, Ethanol, Guaiacol, and Resorcinol
نویسنده
چکیده
When the washed red cells of heparinized human blood are exposed at 4 degrees C. to methanol, ethanol, guaiacol, or resorcinol in hypolytic concentrations in isotonic NaCl, the prolytic loss of K at the end of 20 hours varies from about 25 per cent of the initial K content of the cells in the case of 3.1 M methanol to about 55 per cent of the initial K in the case of 0.04 M resorcinol. As in the case of the prolytic losses observed with other lysins, the K loss is rapid at first and then slows down so that what appears to be a new steady state is reached logarithmically. The K lost from the cells during the period of the prolytic loss is replaced by an approximately equivalent amount of Na, derived from the isotonic NaCl in which the cells are suspended. The Na which enters can be replaced by K by washing the cells in isotonic KCl, and this K can again be replaced by Na by washing the cells in isotonic NaCl. The remainder of the cell K., i.e. the K which was not lost during the period of the prolytic loss, is retained in the cell unaffected by these washing procedures. The capacity of red cells for undergoing disk-sphere transformations is scarcely affected by their having been exposed to hypolytic concentrations of methanol, ethanol, guaiacol, or resorcinol in isotonic NaCl, and their resistance to osmotic hemolysis and to lysis by saponin and digitonin is altered only in minor respects even when as much as 50 per cent of the cell K has been exchanged for Na. Some restriction to the movement of K between the cell and its environment is apparently modified irreversibly when the cell is exposed to hypolytic concentrations of lysins, and the modification is such that only a fraction of the cell K is affected, the fraction being a function of the lysin concentration, the duration of its action, and other factors. A modification of some part of the cell structure and of the properties dependent on its integrity is probably involved: K may be lost more readily from some cells than from others, from some parts of the cell more readily than from other parts, or the explanation may lie in changes in the extent to which Hb binds ions or in modifications of metabolic processes.
منابع مشابه
THE PERMEABILITY OF HUMAN RED CELLS TO CATIONS AFTER TREATMENT WITH RESORCINOL, n-BUTYL ALCOHOL, AND SIMILAR LYSINS
The form of families of curves relating K loss to time in systems containing hypolytic concentrations of resorcinol and of n-butyl alcohol points to the human red cell's being slightly permeable to K and Na even when it is in isotonic NaCl (or plasma), and to the effect of the hypolytic concentrations of lysin being such as to increase this permeability. The rate of reentry of K into red cells ...
متن کاملAnomalous Features of the Loss of K from Human Red Cells: Results of Extended Observations
1. The anomalous course of the curves relating K loss to time in systems containing human red cells in isotonic NaCl, and particularly the high positions of the asymptotes to which the curves apparently proceed, are due to the population of red cells consisting of at least two components, one of which loses K more readily than the other. 2. Since large K-Na exchanges can occur between red cells...
متن کاملK-Na EXGHANGE ACCOMPANYING T H E PROLYTIC LOSS OF K FROM HUMAN RED CELLS BY ERIC PONDER
This paper will amplify the description of the prolytic loss of K from human erythrocytes (Ponder, 1947 a) by adding a description of the behavior of the cells with respect to Na, the other important cation of the system. The movement of Na has not received much attention in the systems in which a prolytic loss of K has been shown to occur (lysis of rabbit red ceils by saponin and several other...
متن کاملK-Na EXGHANGE ACCOMPANYING T H E PROLYTIC LOSS OF K FROM HUMAN RED CELLS BY ERIC PONDER
This paper will amplify the description of the prolytic loss of K from human erythrocytes (Ponder, 1947 a) by adding a description of the behavior of the cells with respect to Na, the other important cation of the system. The movement of Na has not received much attention in the systems in which a prolytic loss of K has been shown to occur (lysis of rabbit red ceils by saponin and several other...
متن کاملThe Prolytic Loss of K from Human Red Cells by Eric Ponder
The prolytic loss of potassium, i.e. the loss of K which occurs before the loss of hemoglobin from red cells exposed to hypolytic concentrations of lysin, has been described by Davson and DanieUi (1938), and has been shown to vary according to the nature of the hemolysin in the system. The purpose of this paper is to extend these observations, which are limited to the measurement of K loss duri...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- The Journal of General Physiology
دوره 30 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1947