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MEMBRANE TRANSPORTERS, ION CHANNELS, AND PUMPS
1NeuroSearch A/S, Ballerup, Denmark; 2Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; 3Department of Biology, The August Krogh Building, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
Submitted 26 November 2008 ; accepted in final form 4 May 2009
Addition of H2O2 (0.5 mM) to Ehrlich ascites tumor cells under isotonic conditions results in a substantial (22 ± 1%) reduction in cell volume within 25 min. The cell shrinkage is paralleled by net loss of K+, which was significant within 8 min, whereas no concomitant increase in the K+ or Cl– conductances could be observed. The H2O2-induced cell shrinkage was unaffected by the presence of clofilium and clotrimazole, which blocks volume-sensitive and Ca2+-activated K+ channels, respectively, and is unaffected by a raise in extracellular K+ concentration to a value that eliminates the electrochemical driving force for K+. On the other hand, the H2O2-induced cell shrinkage was impaired in the presence of the KCl cotransport inhibitor (dihydro-indenyl)oxyalkanoic acid (DIOA), following substitution of NO3– for Cl–, and when the driving force for KCl cotransport was omitted. It is suggested that H2O2 activates electroneutral KCl cotransport in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells and not K+ and Cl– channels. Addition of H2O2 to hypotonically exposed cells accelerates the regulatory volume decrease and the concomitant net loss of K+, whereas no additional increase in the K+ and Cl– conductance was observed. The effect of H2O2 on cell volume was blocked by the serine-threonine phosphatase inhibitor calyculin A, indicating an important role of serine-threonine phosphorylation in the H2O2-mediated activation of KCl cotransport in Ehrlich cells. In contrast, addition of H2O2 to adherent cells, e.g., Ehrlich Lettré ascites cells, a subtype of the Ehrlich ascites tumor cells, and NIH3T3 mouse fibroblasts increased the K+ and Cl– conductances after hypotonic cell swelling. Hence, H2O2 induces KCl cotransport or K+ and Cl– channels in nonadherent and adherent cells, respectively.
regulatory volume decrease; taurine; reactive oxygen species
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