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Use of a lipophilic cation for determination of membrane potential in neuroblastoma-glioma hybrid cell suspensions.

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TLDR
TPP(+) distribution measurements can provide a biochemical method for determining membrane potentials in populations of cultured neuronal cells and are corroborated by intracellular recording techniques.
Abstract
Neuroblastoma-glioma hybrid cells (NG108-15) in suspension accumulate the permeant lipophilic cation [3H]tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP+) against a concentration gradient. The steady-state level of TPP+ accumulation is about twice as great in physiological media of low K+ concentration (i.e., 5 mM K+/135 mM Na+) than in a medium of high K+ concentration (i.e., 121 mM K+/13.5 mM Na+). The latter manipulation depolarizes the NG108-15 plasma membrane and indicates that the resting membrane potential (ΔΨ) is due primarily to a K+ diffusion gradient (Kin+ → Kout+). TPP+ accumulation is time and temperature dependent, achieving a steady state in 15-20 min at 37°C, and is a linear function of cell number and TPP+ concentration (i.e., the concentration gradient is constant). The difference in TPP+ accumulation in low and high K+ media under various conditions has been used to calculate mean (±SD) ΔΨ values of -56 ± 3, -63 ± 4, and -66 ± 5 mV at 26, 33, and 37°C, respectively. Importantly, these values are virtually identical to those obtained by direct electrophysiological measurements made under the same conditions. TPP+ accumulation is abolished by the protonophore carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone, whereas the neurotoxic alkaloid veratridine diminishes uptake to the same level as that observed in high K+ media. In addition, the effect of veratridine is dependent upon the presence of external Na+ and is blocked by tetrodotoxin. The steady-state level of TPP+ accumulation is enhanced by monensin, indicating that this ionophore induces hyperpolarization under appropriate conditions. Finally, ouabain has essentially no effect on the steady-state level of TPP+ accumulation in short-term experiments, suggesting that Na+,K+-ATPase activity makes little contribution to the resting potential in these cells. Because many of these observations are corroborated by intracellular recording techniques, it is concluded that TPP+ distribution measurements can provide a biochemical method for determining membrane potentials in populations of cultured neuronal cells.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mitochondria-Targeted Triphenylphosphonium-Based Compounds: Syntheses, Mechanisms of Action, and Therapeutic and Diagnostic Applications

TL;DR: The physicochemical basis for mitochondrial accumulation of lipophilic cations, synthetic chemistry strategies to target compounds to mitochondria, mitochondrial probes, and sensors, and examples of mitochondrial targeting of bioactive compounds are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Membrane potential can be determined in individual cells from the nernstian distribution of cationic dyes.

TL;DR: The rhodamine esters are nontoxic, highly fluorescent dyes which do not form aggregates or display binding-dependent changes in fluorescence efficiency and allows membrane potentials in individual cells to be continuously monitored, quantitatively related to the contrast between intracellular and extracellular fluorescence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Uptake and retention of hexakis (2-methoxyisobutyl isonitrile) technetium(I) in cultured chick myocardial cells: Mitochondrial and plasma membrane potential dependence

TL;DR: Net uptake and retention data indicate that the fundamental myocellular uptake mechanism of hexakis (2-methoxyisobutyl isonitrile) technetium(I) (Tc-MIBI) involves passive distribution across plasma and mitochondrial membranes and that at equilibrium Tc- MIBI is sequestered within mitochondria by the large negative transmembrane potentials.
Journal Article

Effect of mitochondrial and plasma membrane potentials on accumulation of hexakis (2-methoxyisobutylisonitrile) technetium(I) in cultured mouse fibroblasts.

TL;DR: Results indicated that net cellular uptake and retention of Tc-MIBI in fibroblasts were determined by both mitochondrial and plasma membrane potentials, which may raise the possibility of monitoring membrane potential in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitochondrial and plasma membrane potentials cause unusual accumulation and retention of rhodamine 123 by human breast adenocarcinoma-derived MCF-7 cells.

TL;DR: Quantitative studies of MCF-7 cells and CV-1 cells using the permeant cationic compound tetraphenylphosphonium, in conjunction with fluorescence microscopy using rhodamine 123 (Rh123), indicate that the mitochondrial and plasma membrane potentials affect both uptake and retention of these compounds.
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