Abstract

This study deals with the modulation of the plasma membrane potential (delta psi p) of murine erythroleukemia (MEL) cells by cell-substratum or cell-cell contact. delta psi p was determined by measuring the distribution of tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP+) across the plasma membrane; it appeared strongly, and inversely, influenced by the two types of cell contacts. Contact with the culture surface produced a delta psi p hyperpolarization directly proportional to average distance among the ideal centers of the cells on this surface (d) within the range 10-80 microns. A detailed mathematical analysis of the function delta psi p = f(d) is presented, as well as experiments involving the use of ionophores (valinomycin and A23187) and the conditioning of the culture surface. We concluded that the d-dependent hyperpolarization (dDH) was the result of a complex interplay between the activating properties of substratum on Ca2+-dependent K+ channels (KCa) and some substratum-adherent factors that are shed by MEL cells and antagonize KCa activation (substratum-attached cellular factors = SACF). By contrast, contact of the cells with each other, obtained by incubating MEL cells at d smaller than the average cell diameter (phi = 10 microns), produced a marked delta psi p depolarization. This intercellular contact-dependent depolarization (ICDD) was unaffected by valinomycin; it was abolished by substituting Na+ in the external medium with a nondiffusible cation (choline), which shows that ICDD was sustained by Na+ influxes, probably mediated by stretch-activated (s.a.) cation channels.

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