The relationship of intracellular pH to extracellular pH has been measured in suspensions of isolated hepatocytes at 25 degrees C. The internal pH was found to be a linear function of external pH and it changed by 0.45 pH unit per 1.0 unit change in external pH. The internal [H+] was equal to the external [H+] at approximately pH 7.1. Gluconeogenesis, urea synthesis, and oxidative phosphorylation showed different dependencies on the intracellular pH. Gluconeogenesis was the most sensitive to changes in [H+] and it declined by 80% when the intracellular pH decreased from 7.1 to 6.9. Urea synthesis was less pH-dependent, decreasing by about 30% for the same change in the intracellular [H+] whereas respiratory rate showed very little dependence on pH at this temperature. Intracellular [ATP]/[ADP] decreased linearly from 8.5 to 1.5 as the intracellular pH increased from 6.8 to 7.6, while intracellular [Pi] was essentially constant at 3.2 nmol/mg of cells, wet weight. Cytochrome c became more reduced with increasing intracellular pH, from less than 10% at pH 6.8 to 35% at pH 7.7. The calculated free energy of hydrolysis of ATP was nearly independent of pH as was the free energy of electron transfer from the intramitochondrial NAD couple (calculated from the [acetoacetate]/[3-OH-butyrate] ratio) to cytochrome c.
Dependence of gluconeogenesis, urea synthesis, and energy metabolism of hepatocytes on intracellular pH.
T. Kashiwagura,Carol J. DeutschlI,June M. Taylor,Maria Erecińska,David F. Wilson
Published 1984 in Journal of Biological Chemistry
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- Publication year
1984
- Venue
Journal of Biological Chemistry
- Publication date
1984-01-10
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Chemistry
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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