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The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 60, 471-497, Copyright © 1972 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

Chloride Fluxes in Isolated Dialyzed Barnacle Muscle Fibers

R. DiPolo 1

1 From the Department of Physiology, The Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205.

Dr. DiPolo's present address is the Centro de Biofisica y Bioquímica, Institututo Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, Caracas, Venezuela.

Chloride outflux and influx has been studied in single isolated muscle fibers from the giant barnacle under constant internal composition by means of a dialysis perfusion technique. Membrane potential was continually recorded. The chloride outfluxes and influxes were 143 and 144 pmoles/cm2-sec (mean resting potential: 58 mv, temperature: 22°–24°C) with internal and external chloride concentrations of 30 and 541 mM, respectively. The chloride conductance calculated from tracer measurements using constant field assumptions is about fourfold greater than that calculated from published electrical data. Replacing 97% of the external chloride ions by propionate reduces the chloride efflux by 51%. Nitrate ions applied either to the internal or external surface of the membrane slows the chloride efflux. The external pH dependence of the chloride efflux follows the external pH dependence of the membrane conductance, in the range pH 3.9–4.7, increasing with decreasing pH. In the range pH 5–9, the chloride efflux increased with increasing pH, in a manner similar to that observed in frog muscle fibers. The titration curve for internal pH changes in the range 4.0–7.0 was quantitatively much different from that for external pH change, indicating significant asymmetry in the internal and external pH dependence of the chloride efflux.

Submitted on January 7, 1972


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