Relation between hydrogen ion secretion and oxygen uptake by gastric mucosa

Abstract
Bullfrog gastric mucosae were isolated, mounted between two glass chambers, and bathed with physiological salt solutions equilibrated with 5% CO2 and 95% O2. Oxygen consumption (qO2; measured polaro-graphically) and acid secretion (qH+; pH stat method) were measured along with the transmucosal potential difference (p.d.) and current passing through the mucosa. Histamine (4 X 10-4M) caused an increase in qH+ and qO2. In measurements on nine short-circuited mucosae the mean ratio for the [DELTA]qH+/AqO2 was 2.1. Sodium thiocyanate (0.5-15 m[image]) caused a decrease in qH+ and qO2 and an increase in short-circuit current. These effects were reversible. The ratio of [DELTA]qH+/ qO2 induced by thiocyanate varied from 5.0 to 12.0. Current (0.5 to 1.0 ma/cm2) passed through the mucosae, which reversed the normally observed p.d. to values between +70 and +240 mv (secretory side with respect to nutrient side in an external circuit), caused a decrease in qH+ and qO2; the average [DELTA]qH+/[DELTA]qO2 was approximately 13. Using either thiocyanate or electric current the ratio of the induced [DELTA]qH+/[DELTA] 1O2 can really exceed 4.0, the electrochemical equivalent of oxygen, and thus if this extra oxygen provides the energy for the extra acid secretion these results invalidate a simple redox pump hypothesis of hydrogen ion transport by gastric mucosa.