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XB-ART-25039
Biochemistry 1991 Feb 26;308:2087-92.
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High channel-mediated water permeability in rabbit erythrocytes: characterization in native cells and expression in Xenopus oocytes.

Tsai ST , Zhang RB , Verkman AS .


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Erythrocytes from several mammalian species contain mercurial-sensitive water transporters. By a stopped-flow light scattering technique, osmotic water permeability (Pf) was exceptionally high in rabbit erythrocytes (0.053 +/- 0.002 cm/s) and reversibly inhibited by 98% by p-(chloromercuri)benzenesulfonate (pCMBS). The activation energy (Ea) was 4.6 kcal/mol (15-37 degrees C). pCMBS inhibition was half-maximal at 0.1 mM (60-min incubation); at 1 mM pCMBS, half-maximal inhibition occurred in 8 min. Pf was also inhibited by HgCl2 and pCMB with greater than 90% inhibition in 5 min. There was no inhibition by high concentrations of phloretin, DNDS, cytochalasin B, amiloride, ouabain, furosemide, and several proteases. In defolliculated Xenopus oocytes microinjected with 50 nL of water or unfractionated mRNA (1 mg/mL) from rabbit reticulocytes, oocyte Pf assayed at 10 degrees C after 72-h incubation increased from (4 +/- 1) X 10(-4) cm/s (water injected) to (18 +/- 2) X 10(-4) cm/s (mRNA injected). Pf increased linearly with [mRNA] (0-75 ng/oocyte) and was inhibited slowly and reversibly by pCMBS and immediately by HgCl2 but not by cytochalasin B, phloretin, or DNDS. Ea was 9.6 kcal/mol (water injected) and 2.6 kcal/mol (mRNA injected). These results demonstrate that rabbit erythrocytes have the highest Pf and the greatest percentage inhibition of Pf by mercurials of any mammalian erythrocyte studied. The characteristics of the expressed and native water channels were similar, suggesting that the erythrocyte water channel is a membrane protein suitable for expression cloning.

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