Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2827795 Blood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases 2008 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
The resting membrane potential of the human erythrocyte is largely determined by a constitutive Cl− conductance ∼ 100-fold greater than the resting cation conductance. The 4,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid (DIDS)-sensitive electroneutral Cl− transport mediated by the human erythroid Cl−/HCO3− exchanger, AE1 (SLC4A1, band 3) is > 10,000-fold greater than can be accounted for by the Cl− conductance of the red cell. The molecular identities of conductive anion pathways across the red cell membrane remain poorly defined. We have examined red cell Cl− conductance in the Ae1−/− mouse as a genetic test of the hypothesis that Ae1 mediates DIDS-sensitive Cl− conductance in mouse red cells. We report here that wildtype mouse red cell membrane potential resembles that of human red cells in the predominance of its Cl− conductance. We show with four technical approaches that the DIDS-sensitive component of erythroid Cl− conductance is reduced or absent from Ae1−/− red cells. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the Ae1 anion exchanger polypeptide can operate infrequently in a conductive mode. However, the fragile red cell membrane of the Ae1−/− mouse red cell exhibits reduced abundance or loss of multiple polypeptides. Thus, loss of one or more distinct, DIDS-sensitive anion channel polypeptide(s) from the Ae1−/− red cell membrane cannot be ruled out as an explanation for the reduced DIDS-sensitive anion conductance.
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