| Literature DB >> 1914146 |
S Y Chow1, Y C Yen-Chow, H S White, D M Woodbury.
Abstract
Intracellular pH (pHi) recovery in primary cultures of mouse astrocytes after acid-loading was studied with the ion transport inhibitors (amiloride, SITS, acetazolamide, ouabain and bumetanide), and by reducing the concentration of Na+ or Cl- in HCO3- -free HEPES-buffered (HEPES) and in HCO3-/CO2 Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS). The pHi of astrocytes exposed to 15 mM NH4Cl decreased abruptly and began to recover slowly after 5 min. Exposure of the cells to NH4Cl for 2 min and reincubation in HEPES HBSS decreased pHi further within 1-2 min after removal of NH4Cl; pHi then recovered toward the control value. Cultures exposed to HCO3-/CO2 HBSS (10 mM/2%) showed changes in pHi in the opposite direction. These responses are unique to astrocytes and differ from those occurring in most other cells. Recovery of pHi after NH4Cl prepulse was markedly inhibited in low-Na+ and in amiloride-containing HEPES HBSS. Ouabain also reduced pHi recovery rate; however, SITS, acetazolamide and bumetanide did not. Therefore, Na(+)-H+ exchange is the major process for pHi recovery from acidification in HCO3- -free solution. In HCO3-/CO2 HBSS pHi recovery was markedly inhibited by SITS and acetazolamide, but not by amiloride, ouabain, or bumetanide. The inhibitory effect of SITS on pHi recovery was enhanced in low-Na+ HBSS. These results indicate that both Na+ and HCO3- are directly related to pHi recovery in HCO3-/CO2 solution after acid-load. Low-Cl HEPES HBSS and low-Cl HCO3-/CO2 HBSS media did not alter pH recovery rate. Thus, pHi recovery after acid-load is not Cl- -dependent, and therefore, does not involve a Na(+)-dependent Cl- -HCO3- exchange process. It appears that mouse astrocytes possess 3 acid-regulating systems: Na(+)-H+ exchange, Na(+)-HCO3- co-transport and Na(+)-independent Cl- -HCO3- exchange.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1914146 DOI: 10.1016/0165-3806(91)90156-d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Res Dev Brain Res ISSN: 0165-3806