Abstract
Direct demonstration of the cellular location of sodium pumping constitutes a key problem in the solution of intestinal sodium absorpuon. Utilizing silicone-impregnated epoxy sections of freeze-dried, osmium-fixed tissue, ouabain-SH and inulin-3H light microscope radioautographs have been produced which show that: lateral but not brush border membranes of rabbit small intestine bind ouabain-3H (high specific activity) with an affini W so great that a subsequent washing in ouabain-free medmm has little effect on binding; lateral membrane binding is not apparent with low specific activity ouabain-3H, and inulin-~H and ouabain- 3H (low specific activity) in the cores of the villi do not equilibrate with the intercellular spaces. Preliminary tracer measurements of ouabain-3H and inulin-14C spaces also agree with these findings As ouabain is a specific inhibitor of active sodium transport, these observations provide direct support for the view that lateral membrane pumping of sodium into the intercellular spaces causes, through osmotic forces on water, a flow of fluid out of these spaces into the interstitium. © 1972, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Stirling, C. E. (1972). Radioautographic localization of sodium pump sites in rabbit intestine. Journal of Cell Biology, 53(3), 704–714. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.53.3.704
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.