The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 76, Issue 6 683-708, Copyright © 1980 by Society of General Physiologists
Volume regulation by Amphiuma red blood cells. The membrane potential and its implications regarding the nature of the ion-flux pathways
P. M. Cala
Department of Human Physiology, University of California School of Medicine, Davis 95616, USA.
After osmotic perturbation, the red blood cells of Amphiuma exhibited a
volume-regulatory response that returned cell volume back to or toward
control values. After osmotic swelling, cell-volume regulation (regulatory
volume decrease; RVD) resulted from net cellular loss of K, Cl, and
osmotically obliged H2O. In contrast, the volume-regulatory response to
osmotic shrinkage (regulatory volume increase; RVI) was characterized by
net cellular uptake of Na, Cl, and H2O. The net K and Na fluxes
characteristic of RVD and RVI are increased by 1-2 orders of magnitude
above those observed in studies of volume-static control cells. The cell
membrane potential of volume-regulating and volume-static cells was
measured by impalement with glass microelectrodes. The information gained
from the electrical and ion-flux studies led to the conclusion that the ion
fluxes responsible for cell-volume regulation proceed via electrically
silent pathways. Furthermore, it was observed that Na fluxes during RVI
were profoundly sensitive to medium [HCO3] and that during RVI the medium
becomes more acid, whereas alkaline shifts in the suspension medium
accompany RVD. The experimental observations are explained by a model
featuring obligatorily coupled alkali metal-H and Cl-HCO3 exchangers. The
anion- and cation-exchange pathways are separate and distinct yet
functionally coupled via the net flux of H. As a result of the operation of
such pathways, net alkali metal, Cl, and H2O fluxes proceed in the same
direction, whereas H and HCO3 fluxes are cyclic. Data also are presented
that suggest that the ion-flux pathways responsible for cell-volume
regulation are not activated by changes in cell volume per se but by some
event associated with osmotic perturbation, such as changes in
intracellular pH.