Abstract

Recent studies have established that urea alters the activity of several volume-sensitive cation transport pathways. However, it has remained unclear whether urea has any effect on transport pathways that are not volume-sensitive. We examined the effect of urea on Na-K pump in the human erythrocytes. In cells from nine subjects, 500 mM urea inhibited 52 +/- 10% of the pump activity measured as the ouabain-sensitive (OS) K influx. Urea inhibited the OS K influx reversibly, in a concentration-dependent manner. [3H] oubain binding, a measure of the number of Na-K pump sites remained unchanged with urea. Urea decreased the Vmax for ouabain-sensitive K influx, but did not alter the apparent K(m) for external K. Furthermore, urea did not alter the apparent K(m) for intracellular Na. The ion turnover per pump site was decreased in the presence of urea. Thus, physiologically relevant urea concentration inhibit the Na-K pump in human erythrocyte. The inhibition of the Na-K pump by urea suggests that the effects of urea may not be limited to volume-sensitive transporters, but may be more widespread.

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