Localization of [3H]ouabain-sensitive Na+ pump sites in cultured pig kidney cells

Abstract
Pig kidney cells, LLC-PK1, grown by standard tissue-culture techniques form monolayers and maintain morphological features characteristic of epithelia. Cultures exposed to 2 X 10(-6) M [3H]ouabain for 30 min at 37 degrees C bound 7.77 +/- 0.37 pmol/mg protein. This could be reduced by 58% by incubation in the presence of 45 mM K+. Freeze-dry radioautographic localization of [3H]ouabain-binding sites revealed grains distributed only along that fraction of the plasmalemma directly facing the culture-dish surface. Binding and localization of [3H]ouabain were correlated with an inhibition of the Na+ pump in these cells because analysis of cellular electrolytes in control cultures versus those exposed to 10(-3) M ouabain revealed a fall in K+ from 419 +/- 9 to 173 +/- 4 mmol/kg dry wt with a reciprocal increase in Na+. There was no change in cell H2O. Similarly, oxygen consumption was reduced by 32% after exposure to ouabain. These results provide direct evidence that in epithelial cells in culture the membrane facing the culture dish corresponds to the basolateral membrane of epithelial cells in vivo.