2 resultados para RENAC
em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI
Resumo:
Streaming potentials across cloned epithelial Na+ channels (ENaC) incorporated into planar lipid bilayers were measured. We found that the establishment of an osmotic pressure gradient (Δπ) across a channel-containing membrane mimicked the activation effects of a hydrostatic pressure differential (ΔP) on αβγ-rENaC, although with a quantitative difference in the magnitude of the driving forces. Moreover, the imposition of a Δπ negates channel activation by ΔP when the Δπ was directed against ΔP. A streaming potential of 2.0 ± 0.7 mV was measured across αβγ-rat ENaC (rENaC)-containing bilayers at 100 mM symmetrical [Na+] in the presence of a 2 Osmol/kg sucrose gradient. Assuming single file movement of ions and water within the conduction pathway, we conclude that between two and three water molecules are translocated together with a single Na+ ion. A minimal effective pore diameter of 3 Å that could accommodate two water molecules even in single file is in contrast with the 2-Å diameter predicted from the selectivity properties of αβγ-rENaC. The fact that activation of αβγ-rENaC by ΔP can be reproduced by the imposition of Δπ suggests that water movement through the channel is also an important determinant of channel activity.
Resumo:
We investigated the cellular and molecular events associated with the increase in sodium transport across the alveolar epithelium of rats exposed to hyperoxia (85% O2 for 7 days followed by 100% O2 for 4 days). Alveolar type II (ATII) cell RNA was isolated and probed with a cDNA for one of the rat colonic epithelial sodium channel subunits (alpha rENaC). The alpha rENaC mRNA (3.7-kb transcript) increased 3-fold in ATII cell RNA isolated from rats exposed to 85% O2 for 7 days and 6-fold after 4 days of subsequent exposure to 100% O2. In situ hybridization revealed increased expression of alpha rENaC mRNA transcripts in both airway and alveolar epithelial cells of hyperoxic rats. When immunostained with a polyclonal antibody to kidney sodium channel protein, ATII cells from hyperoxic rats exhibited a significant increase in the amount of immunogenic protein present in both the plasma membrane and the cytoplasm. When patched in the whole-cell mode, ATII cells from hyperoxic rats exhibited amiloride and 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)-2',4'-amiloride (EIPA)-sensitive currents that were 100% higher compared with those obtained from air-breathing rats. Single-channel sodium currents (mean conductance of 25 pS) were seen in ATII cells patched in both the inside-out and cell-attached modes. The number and open probability of these channels increased significantly during exposure to hyperoxia. Exposure to sublethal hyperoxia up-regulated both alpha rENaC mRNA and the functional expression of sodium channels in ATII cells.