An examination of the literature on cell permeability to water reveals the fact that very few types of cells possess characteristics which make them available for accurate quantitative determinations of permeability. The egg cells of a number of species of Echinoderms (k200 = 0.110 p3 H,O) (Luck6 an
Osmotic properties of human lymphocyte
β Scribed by H. G. Hempling; S. Thompson; A. Dupre
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 912 KB
- Volume
- 93
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The osmotic properties of human lymphocytes isolated from 15 ml of venous blood were examined. Measurements of the permeability of the membrane to water under an osmotic gradient were also made. The BoyleβVan't Hoff relation held very well for the human lymphocyte when the cells were shrunken in hyperosmotic media to concentrations twice isosmotic. The volume of osmotically inactive material or βbβ value averaged 32% of the mean corpuscular volume. These values were independent of temperature. Ponder's R ranged between 0.8 and 0.9. The average value for Lp, the hydraulic coefficient was 0.46 ΞΌ/min atm Β± 0.02 (S.E.M.) at 25Β°C. No significant effect of age, sex, or race was noted. The effect of temperature between 10Β°C and 37Β°C was measured and heats of activation between 11.1 and 17.4 kcal/mole were calculated with a mean of 14.1 kcal/mole Β± 1.6 (S.E.M.) Concanavalin A at 10 ΞΌg/ 1.5 Β± 10^6^ lymphocytes produced blastogenesis of 25% or more of the lymphocytes without clumping, agglutination, or toxicity. The mean corpuscular volume increased by 21% after 72 hours due to an increase in the βbβ value which increased by 80%. The volume of free water remained constant. Histograms of the distribution of cell volumes showed that volume changes were uniform throughout the population with no evidence of agglutination or clumping. The significance of these results is discussed in the context of membrane fluidity and the state of intracellular water.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The dynamic response of chick blood lymphocytes to hypotonic shock is investigated using electrical sizing techniques, and an attempt is made to characterize the mechanisms involved. The cells first swell rapidly, as expected, but then gradually return to their initial volume. Maximum v
An improved form of the thermoelectric osmometer developed by one of the authors has been used to study solutions of p-aminobenzoic acid, citric acid, sodium citrate, sodium salicylate, sodium benzoate, morphine hydrochloride, and papaverine hydrochloride alone and in combination with caffeine. T h
## Abstract Human peripheral blood lymphocytes were separated into subpopulations enriched or depleted with respect to B lymphocytes (Igβbearing cells), T lymphocytes, (cells forming rosettes with sheep erythrocytes: EβRFC) and Fc receptorβbearing lymphocytes (EAβRFC). From the distributions and r