Abstract

Three widely documented mechanisms of chloride transport across plasma membranes are anion-coupled antiport, sodium-coupled symport, and an electrochemical coupling process. No direct genetic evidence has yet been provided for primary active chloride transport despite numerous reports of cellular Cl(-)-stimulated adenosine triphosphate (ATP)ases coexisting in the same tissue with uphill chloride transport that could not be accounted for by the three common chloride transport processes. Cl(-)-stimulated ATPases are a common property of practically all biological cells, with the major location being of mitochondrial origin. It also appears that plasma membranes are sites of Cl(-)-stimulated ATPase activity. Recent studies of Cl(-)-stimulated ATPase activity and chloride transport in the same membrane system, including liposomes, suggest a mediation by the ATPase in net movement of chloride up its electrochemical gradient across plasma membranes. Further studies, especially from a molecular biological perspective, are required to confirm a direct transport role to plasma membrane-localized Cl(-)-stimulated ATPases.

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