Abstract
Animal cells initially swell in hypotonic media by osmotic water equilibration, but their volume is subsequently regulated by a net loss of KCl and amino acids with concomitant loss of cell water. Mechanisms for regulating cell volume are important in allowing cells to adapt to variations in external tonicity and metabolic load. In red cells the KCl loss is mediated by electroneutral ion transport mechanisms. In contrast, conductive K+ and Cl- transport pathways are activated during regulatory volume decrease in several cell types including epithelia. The activation seems to be mediated by internal Ca2+, but the detailed mechanism is not known. In a leaky epithelium, the choroid plexus epithelium, we have found a cation-selective, Ca2+-permeable channel which opens with membrane stretch. The epithelium also contains a high density of the large (approximately 200 pS) type of Ca2+- voltage-activated K+ channel. Both channels are normally closed. I propose that in hypotonic media, the stretching of the cell membrane produced by the initial swelling causes influx of Ca2+ through the stretch-activated channels, which activates the neighbouring large K+ channels to produce increased K+ outflux with associated loss of cell water.