The Journal of General Physiology
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The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 26, 467-472, Copyright © 1943 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

THE EFFECT OF LOW OXYGEN TENSION ON TISSUE METABOLISM (RETINA)

Francis N. Craig 1 and Henry K. Beecher 1

1 From the Anesthesia Laboratory of the Harvard Medical School at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston

Lactic acid production by rat retina in a medium containing phosphate was studied chemically. One half as much lactic acid was found as in a medium containing bicarbonate. In our experience the rate of respiration in a phosphate medium was sensitive to oxygen tension, for it was 38 per cent lower at 10 per cent and 51 per cent lower at 5 per cent oxygen than at 100 per cent oxygen. Previously Laser had reported no decrease in respiration at 5 per cent oxygen in phosphate medium. In phosphate medium, when the oxygen tension was varied, respiration and glycolysis bore a reciprocal relationship to each other.

In bicarbonate medium, when the oxygen tension was lowered from 95 per cent to 5 per cent there was no significant change in the respiration, but glycolysis was increased nearly to the anaerobic level. This agrees with the earlier experiment of Laser in bicarbonate medium and adds support to his conclusion that the rate of glycolysis is controlled by oxygen tension rather than by the rate of respiration, under the conditions of the experiment.

Submitted on February 27, 1943


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Arch OphthalmolHome page
A. C. KRAUSE and J. A. SIBLEY
METABOLISM OF THE RETINA
Arch Ophthalmol, September 1, 1946; 36(3): 328 - 348.
[Abstract] [PDF]



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