Cationic selectivity and competition at the sodium entry site in frog skin.

Abstract
The cation selectivity of the Na entry mechanism located in the outer membrane of the bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) skin epithelium was studied. This selectivity was determined by measuring the short-circuit current when all of the external Na was replaced by another cation and, also, by noting the relative degree of inhibition that the alkali metal cations produced on Na influx. The ability of the Group Ia cations to permeate the apical membrane was determined from the tracer uptake experiments. The results apparently demonstrate that only Li and Na are actively transported through the epithelium; the alkali cations K, Rb and Cs do not enter the epithelium through the apical border and Na and Li are the only alkali cations translocated through this membrane; these impermeable cations are competitive inhibitors of Na entry; the cations NH4 and Tl exhibit more complex behavior but, under well-defined conditions, also inhibit Na entry; and the selectivity of the cation binding site is in the sequence Li .simeq. Na > Tl > NH4 .simeq. K > Rb > Cs, which corresponds to a high field strength site with tetrahedral symmetry.