Abstract
Inhibition of sodium/potassium pumping by isolated goldfish hair cells led to a rapid gain of sodium and loss of potassium. Half-times for turnover were about 10 min, among the fastest of any cell type examined by electron-probe analysis. Pumping was inhibited by removal of extracellular potassium or by treatment with 1 mM ouabain, as expected of a classical (Na +,K +)-ATPase. The initial rate of entry of sodium after inhibition, about 4 mM/min, provided an estimate of resting sodium-entry and sodium-pumping rates. After return to control medium, cells loaded with sodium by removal of extracellular potassium could recover their normal high-potassium/low-sodium status. The initial rate of recovery (an estimate of the cells' maximum sodium-pumping rate) was sufficient to lower cell sodium by 10 mM/min. This functional estimate of hair-cell (Na +,K +)-ATPase activity was of the same order of magnitude as the biochemical activity of (Na +,K +)-ATPase previously reported for sensory epithelia of other species. The balance between sodium entry and sodium pumping determines hair-cell ionic composition, and thus the resting potential and the driving forces for sodium-coupled transport processes. Imbalance due to excess sodium entry or loss of pump capacity could have significant consequences for hair-cell function and integrity.
Published Version
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