The influence of cellular amino acids and the Na+ : K+ pump on the membrane potential of the Ehrlich ascites tumor cell
- PMID: 213114
- DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(78)90263-8
The influence of cellular amino acids and the Na+ : K+ pump on the membrane potential of the Ehrlich ascites tumor cell
Abstract
The membrane potential of the Ehrlich ascites tumor cell was shown to be influenced by its amino acid content and the activity of the Na+ :K+ pump. The membrane potential (monitored by the fluorescent dye, 3,3'-dipropylthiodicarbocyanine iodide) varied with the size of the endogenous amino acid pool and with the concentration of accumulated 2-aminoisobutyrate. When cellular amino acid content was high, the cells were hyperpolarized; as the pool declined in size, the cells were depolarized. The hyperpolarization seen with cellular amino acid required cellular Na+ but not cellular ATP. Na+ efflux was more rapid from cells containing 2-aminoisobutyrate than from cells low in internal amino acids. These observations indicate that the hyperpolarization recorded in cells with high cellular amino acid content resulted from the electrogenic co-efflux of Na+ and amino acids. Cellular ATP levels were found to decline rapidly in the presence of the dye and hence the influence of the pump was seen only if glucose was added to the cells. When the cells contained normal Na+ (approx. 30mM), the Na+ :K+ pump was shown to have little effect on the membrane potential (the addition of ouabain had little effect on the potential). When cellular Na+ was raised to 60mM, the activity of the pump changed the membrane potential from the range -25 to -30 mV to -44 to -63 mV. This hyperpolarization required external K+ and was inhibited by ouabain.
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