Abstract

Using the antibiotic Nystatin, we have developed a systematic method for the preparation of red blood cells with independently selected levels of intracellular Na + concentrations and water content. Such cells provided an experimental model to study the effect of Na +/K + pump stimulation on red cell water content. Even in initially dehydrated cells, stimulation of the Na +/K + pump by elevated intracellular Na + caused subsequent further loss of cell water. Cell water loss was reflected in decreased monovalent cation content per unit mass of hemoglobin and by a shift in the density distribution of the cell populations to higher densities on discontinuous Stractan gradients. We conclude that the 3 Na out + : 2 K in + stoichiometry of the Na +/K + pump results in a net desalting effect with increased pump activity. Under the conditions of these experiments, the cell appears to have no effective mechanism to compensate for a net loss of ions and water.

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