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The Journal of General Physiology logoLink to The Journal of General Physiology
. 1984 Oct 1;84(4):623–642. doi: 10.1085/jgp.84.4.623

Active ion transport in the renal proximal tubule. II. Ionic dependence of the Na pump

PMCID: PMC2228748  PMID: 6094705

Abstract

The dependence of Na pump activity on intracellular and extracellular Na+ and K+ was investigated using a suspension of rabbit cortical tubules that contained mostly (86%) proximal tubules. The ouabain- sensitive rate of respiration (QO2) was used to measure the Na pump activity of intact tubules, and the Na,K-ATPase hydrolytic activity was measured using lysed proximal tubule membranes. The dependence (K0.5) of the Na pump on intracellular Na+ was affected by the relative intracellular concentration of K+, ranging from approximately 10 to 15 mM at low K+ and increasing to approximately 30 mM as the intracellular K+ was increased. The Na pump had a K0.5 for extracellular K+ of 1.3 mM in the presence of saturating concentrations of intracellular Na+. Measurements of the Na,K-ATPase activity under comparable conditions rendered similar values for the K0.5 of Na+ and K+. The Na pump activity in the intact tubules saturated as a function of extracellular Na at approximately 80 mM Na, with a K0.5 of 30 mM. Since Na pump activity under these conditions could be further stimulated by increasing Na+ entry with the cationophore nystatin, these values pertain to the Na+ entry step and not to the Na+ dependence of the intracellular Na+ site. When tubules were exposed to different extracellular K+ concentrations and the intracellular Na+ concentration was subsaturating, the Na pump had an apparent K0.5 of 0.4 mM for extracellular K. Under normal physiological conditions, the Na pump is unsaturated with respect to intracellular Na+, and indirect analysis suggests that the proximal cell may have an intracellular Na+ concentration of approximately 35 mM.

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