scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Effects of intracellular adenosine-5'-diphosphate and orthophosphate on the sensitivity of sodium efflux from squid axon to external sodium and potassium.

Paul De Weer
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 56, Iss: 5, pp 583-620
TLDR
An outline is presented for a model which might explain the effects of ADP, Pi and deoxy-ATP, and it is shown that sodium efflux is maximally Ko-dependent when the ATP:ADP ratio is about 10:1, becomes insensitive to Ko when the ratios are about 1:2, and is inhibited byKo when the ratio isAbout 1:10.
Abstract
A study was made of sodium efflux from squid giant axon, and its sensitivity to external K and Na. When sodium efflux from untreated axons was strongly stimulated by Ko, Nao was inhibitory; when dependence on Ko was low, Nao had a stimulatory effect. Incipient CN poisoning or apyrase injection, which produces high intracellular levels of ADP1 and Pi, rendered sodium efflux less dependent on external K and more dependent on external Na. Injection of ADP, AMP, arginine, or creatine + creatine phosphokinase, all of which raise ADP levels without raising Pi levels, had the same effect as incipient CN poisoning. Pi injection had no effect on the K sensitivity of sodium efflux. Axons depleted of arginine and phosphoarginine by injection of arginase still lost their K sensitivity when the ATP:ADP ratio was lowered and regained it partially when the ratio was raised. Rough calculations show that sodium efflux is maximally Ko-dependent when the ATP:ADP ratio is about 10:1, becomes insensitive to Ko when the ratio is about 1:2, and is inhibited by Ko when the ratio is about 1:10. Deoxy-ATP mimicked ADP when injected into intact axons. Excess Mg, as well as Pi, inhibited both strophanthidin-sensitive and strophanthidin-insensitive sodium efflux. An outline is presented for a model which might explain the effects of ADP, Pi and deoxy-ATP.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Sodium-sodium exchange through the sodium pump: the roles of ATP and ADP.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that the outward movement of sodium ions through the sodium pump is associated with the transfer of a phosphoryl group from ATP to the enzyme is supported, and that the inward movement of Sodium ionsthrough the pump isassociated with the return of a phosphate group from the phosphoenzyme to ADP is supported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Altering the ATP/ADP Ratio on Pump-mediated Na/K and Na/Na Exchanges in Resealed Human Red Blood Cell Ghosts

TL;DR: The acceleration of the Na/K pump that occurs upon removing external Na at high levels of ADP evidently results from a shift in the forward direction of the transformation of the intermediates involved with the release of occluded Na from E1P X (Na).
Journal ArticleDOI

Potential‐dependent membrane current during the active transport of ions in snail neurones

TL;DR: The inhibition of this current by ouabain (10−4 M) and by cooling to + 7° C confirmed its link with the active transport of ions, therefore this current is called the pump current.
Journal ArticleDOI

Starvation and Seizures: Observations on the Electroconvulsive Threshold and Cerebral Metabolism of the Starved Adult Rat

TL;DR: The observed cerebral biochemical alterations are believed to be the consequence of increased ketone body utilization, although the precise relationship to the alteration in the electroconvulsive threshold remains unclear.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrogenic Na+/Ca2+-exchange of nerve and muscle cells.

TL;DR: The main problem in determining the role of Na(+)/Ca(2+)-exchange in excitation-secretion/contraction coupling is the lack of specific (mode-selective) blockers.
Related Papers (5)