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Extracellular terbium and divalent cation effects on the red blood cell Na pump and chrysoidine effects on the renal Na pump.

Blood cells, molecules & diseases (2007-04-27)
Matthew S Reifenberger, Krista L Arnett, Craig Gatto, Mark A Milanick
RESUMEN

We examined the effect of extracellular terbium (Tb(3+)) and divalent metal cations (Ca(2+), Sr(2+), and Ba(2+)) on (86)Rb(+) influx into rabbit and human red blood cells. We found that Tb(3+) at 15 and 25 microM was a non-competitive inhibitor of (86)Rb(+) influx suggesting that Tb(3+) is not binding to the transport site. This result reduces the usefulness of Tb(3+) as a potential probe for the E(out) conformation (the conformation with the transport site facing extracellularly). Ba(2+), Sr(2+) and Ca(2+), at concentrations >50 mM, had minimal effects on Rb(+) influx into red blood cells (1 mM Rb-out). This suggests that the outside transport site is very specific for monovalent cations over divalent cations, in contrast to the inside transport site. We also found that chrysoidine (4-phenylazo-m-phenylenediamine) competes with Na(+) for ATPase activity and K(+) for pNPPase activity suggesting it is binding to the E(in) conformation. Chrysoidine and similar compounds may be useful as optical probes of the E(in) conformation.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Chrysoidine G, for microscopy (Bact., Bot., Vit.)
Supelco
Chrysoidine G, analytical standard