Depolarization-induced alkalinization in proximal tubules. I. Characteristics and dependence on Na+
- PMID: 2916666
- DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.1989.256.2.F342
Depolarization-induced alkalinization in proximal tubules. I. Characteristics and dependence on Na+
Abstract
We used intracellular pH-sensitive and voltage microelectrodes to examine the effects of depolarization on intracellular pH (pHi) in isolated perfused proximal tubules from the tiger salamander Ambystoma tigrinum. Tubules were depolarized by raising [K+] in the bath (b) or lumen (l), or by adding Ba2+ (1 mM) to the bath or lumen, always in nominally HCO3-free solutions. Increasing [K+]b from 2.5 to 50 mM caused the basolateral membrane to depolarize by an average of 45 mV, and pHi to increase by 0.23 over 3 min. Similar alkalinization was observed when basolateral Ba2+ (1 mM) was used to depolarize the cell at constant extracellular [K+], suggesting that the alkalinization observed during exposure to elevated [K+]b results from depolarization rather than an increase in [K+]b. The initial rate of depolarization-induced alkalinization (DIA) was proportional to the magnitude of the depolarization, regardless of whether tubules were depolarized by elevated [K+]b, elevated [K+]l, or by basolateral Ba2+. An exception was the initial rate of the alkalinization caused by 1 mM luminal Ba2+, which was more than 10-fold greater than that predicted from the depolarization. The voltage and pHi responses to basolateral Ba2+ were smaller in some tubules than others, as were the responses to elevated [K+]l. Tubules with small responses to 1 mM [Ba2+]b had large responses to 50 mM [K+]l, whereas tubules with large responses to 1 mM [Ba2+]b had small responses to 50 mM [K+]l. This variability can be accounted for by differences in the luminal K+ conductance. The DIA was partially inhibited by removal of Na+ from only the lumen or only the bath, but completely inhibited by bilateral Na+ removal. We conclude that the depolarization-induced alkalinization results from additive effects of Na+-dependent processes at both the luminal and basolateral membranes.
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