Abstract

Elemental (Na, Cl, K) and water contents of leech (Macrobdella decora) neurons and glial cells were determined under steady-state exposure to 4, 10, and 20 mM KCl concentrations (bathing media) using x-ray microanalysis for quantitative digital imaging of frozen hydrated and dried cryosections. Effects of furosemide, 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), and ouabain on elemental distribution changes, induced by exposure to 20 mM K, were also determined. Results demonstrated that packet glial cells and neurons accumulated substantial amounts of K that appeared evenly distributed throughout the cytoplasm. Cell water content also increased as a function of increased cytoplasmic K so that the net effect was an unchanged wet-weight K concentration (expressed as millimoles per kilogram wet weight). Dry-weight Na and Cl concentration (expressed as millimoles per kilogram dry weight) increased slightly in glial cells; however, because cell water increased, both Na and Cl (wet-weight) concentrations decreased. Neurons, in contrast, had no significant change in either Na or K on a wet-weight basis, so a relatively constant Na/K ratio was maintained despite a small, but significant, increase in K (dry weight) and cell water. These increases, like those in packet glia, were a function of exposure to different concentrations of extracellular space K. These changes were completely abolished by 10(-4) M ouabain. Neither furosemide nor 5-HT appeared to affect neuronal or glial K wet-weight concentrations. These data show that both glial cells and neurons can act as substantial reservoirs for K while maintaining stable K concentrations (by altering cell water content and elemental composition). This process appears to depend on a functioning Na+, K+-ATPase system.

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