Effect of cell age and phenylhydrazine on the cation transport properties of rabbit erythrocytes
- 1 February 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Cellular Physiology
- Vol. 154 (2), 271-280
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.1041540209
Abstract
We studied the effect of cell age on the cation transport systems of rabbit erythrocytes by increasing the proportion of circulating young erythrocytes with either repeated bleeding or with phenylhydrazine (PHZ) treatment. We found that when the reticulocyte content of rabbit blood is increased by bleeding (from 1 to 40–50% of the circulating red cells), the response of the various transport pathways differs. The largest increase (fivefold) was found in the activity of K-CI contransport which peaked 3 days after the last bleeding. The Na-K pump activity peaked at a similar time, but the % increase was twofold less than the K-CI contransport. There was very small increase in the activity of the Na-Li exchange, whereas the Na-H exchange reached peak values 10 days after the last bleeding (twofold increase), when activities of K-Cl contransport and Na-K pump had returned to almost normal levels. In vivo PHZ treatment resulted in anemia and marked reticulocytosis (80–90% of circulating cells). Transport rates were markedly increased (Na-K pump 9.6-fold, Na-H exchange 6.8-fold, Na-Li exchange 2.75-fold; K-CI contransport: 10–20-fold). When blood from PHZ-treated rabbits was incubated in vitro for 24–48 hour, red cell volume and K content decreased. This process was associated with a 70% reduction in the activity of the K-CI contransport after 24 hours and a 90% reduction after 48 hours. The activity of the other systems also declined and approached baseline values after 48 hours. Loss of transport activity was not affected by 10 μM E-64, whereas 10 mM methylamine reduced the inactivation of the Na-H exchange and of the Na-Li exchange. PHZ treatment of rabbit red cells in vitro resulted in marked increase of the K-CI contransport and inhibition of Na-K pump, Na-H exchange, and Na-Li exchange. These effects were abolished by DTT, with the exception of the Na-K pump inhibition, which was DTT insensitive. Thus both cell age and oxidative damage are important determinants of cation transport in rabbit red cells.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enhanced proteolysis and changes in membrane-associated calpain following phenylhydrazine insult to human red cellsToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1991
- Na+/Na+ exchange and Na+/H+ antiport in rabbit erythrocytes: Two distinct transport systemsThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1991
- Interactions of external and internal H+ and Na+ with Na+/Na+ and Na+/H+ exchange of rabbit red cells: Evidence for a common pathwayThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1990
- Thiol-dependent passive K:Cl transport in sheep red blood cells: X. A hydroxylamine-oxidation induced K:Cl flux blocked by diethylpyrocarbonateThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1990
- Thiol-dependent K∶Cl transport in sheep red cells: VIII. Activation through metabolically and chemically reversible oxidation by diamideThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1988
- Na+ for H+ exchange in rabbit erythrocytesJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1987
- K+:Cl− Cotransport: Sulfhydryls, divalent cations, and the mechanism of volume activation in a red cellThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1985
- Iron supply for erythropoiesis in the rabbit.JCI Insight, 1984
- Thiol-dependent passive K/Cl transport in sheep red cells: II. Loss of Cl− and N-ethylmaleimide sensitivity in maturing high K+ cellsThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1983
- Characterization of a potassium carrier in rabbit reticulocyte cell membraneThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1980