Determination of intracellular pH by 31P magnetic resonance.
R. B. Moon, J. Richards
Observation of the ^(31)P signal from various intracellular phosphates can provide a convenient, nondestructive technique for determining intracellular conditions such as pH. This procedure has been explored with particular reference to the erythrocyte. Both the chemical shift of intracellular inorganic phosphate relative to that of serum phosphate and the positions of, and more especially the difference between, the chemical shifts of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate have been used to monitor intracellular pH of erythrocytes whose hemoglobin has been liganded with carbon monoxide.
1100 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
Intracellular pH transients in squid giant axons caused by CO2, NH3, and metabolic inhibitors
W. Boron, P. De Weer
The intracellular pH (pHi) of squid giant axons has been measured using glass pH microelectrodes. Resting pHi in artificial seawater (ASW) (pH 7.6-7.8) at 23 degrees C was 7.32 +/- 0.02 (7.28 if corrected for liquid junction potential). Exposure of the axon to 5% CO2 at constant external pH caused a sharp decrease in pHi, while the subsequent removal of the gas caused pHi to overshoot its initial value. If the exposure to CO2 was prolonged, two additional effects were noted: (a) during the exposure, the rapid initial fall in pHi was followed by a slow rise, and (b) after the exposure, the overshoot was greatly exaggerated. Application of external NH4Cl caused pHi to rise sharply; return to normal ASW caused pHi to return to a value below its initial one. If the exposure to NH4Cl was prolonged, two additional effects were noted: (a) during the exposure, the rapid initial rise in pHi was followed by a slow fall, and (b) after the exposure, the undershoot was greatly exaggerated. Exposure to several weak acid metabolic inhibitors caused a fall in pHi whose reversibility depended upon length of exposure. Inverting the electrochemical gradient for H+ with 100 mM K- ASW had no effect on pHi changes resulting from short-term exposure to azide. A mathematical model explains the pHi changes caused by NH4Cl on the basis of passive movements of both NH3 and NH4+. The simultaneous passive movements of CO2 and HCO3-cannot explain the results of the CO2 experiments; these data require the postulation of an active proton extrusion and/or sequestration mechanism.
947 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
Isoelectric focusing in immobilized pH gradients: principle, methodology and some applications.
B. Bjellqvist, K. Ek, P. Righetti
et al.
922 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
Structural organization of the bcr gene and its role in the Ph′ translocation
N. Heisterkamp, K. Stam, J. Groffen
et al.
898 sitasi
en
Biology, Medicine
Effect of pH on the stability of plant phenolic compounds.
M. Friedman, Hella Jürgens
841 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
CMS Physics Technical Design Report, Volume II: Physics Performance
G. Bayatian, S. Chatrchyan, G. Hmayakyan
et al.
The influence of soil pH on denitrification: progress towards the understanding of this interaction over the last 50 years
M. Šimek, J. Cooper
Biohydrogen production as a function of pH and substrate concentration.
S. Ginkel, S. Sung, J. Lay
754 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
The pH-dependent surface charging and the points of zero charge.
M. Kosmulski
754 sitasi
en
Medicine, Chemistry
Aggregation and disaggregation of iron oxide nanoparticles: Influence of particle concentration, pH and natural organic matter.
Mohammed Baalousha
573 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
Performance of microbial fuel cell subjected to variation in pH, temperature, external load and substrate concentration.
G. S. Jadhav, M. Ghangrekar
569 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
Influence of ionic strength, pH, and cation valence on aggregation kinetics of titanium dioxide nanoparticles.
R. A. French, A. Jacobson, Bojeong Kim
et al.
560 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
Structure of a Na+/H+ antiporter and insights into mechanism of action and regulation by pH
C. Hunte, E. Screpanti, M. Venturi
et al.
637 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
pH-Induced aggregation of gold nanoparticles for photothermal cancer therapy.
Jutaek Nam, Nayoun Won, Ho Jin
et al.
522 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
Self-assembly of spider silk proteins is controlled by a pH-sensitive relay
G. Askarieh, M. Hedhammar, K. Nordling
et al.
445 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
The Fungal Pathogen Candida albicans Autoinduces Hyphal Morphogenesis by Raising Extracellular pH
S. Vylkova, A. Carman, H. Danhof
et al.
ABSTRACT pH homeostasis is critical for all organisms; in the fungal pathogen Candida albicans, pH adaptation is critical for virulence in distinct host niches. We demonstrate that beyond adaptation, C. albicans actively neutralizes the environment from either acidic or alkaline pHs. Under acidic conditions, this species can raise the pH from 4 to >7 in less than 12 h, resulting in autoinduction of the yeast-hyphal transition, a critical virulence trait. Extracellular alkalinization has been reported to occur in several fungal species, but under the specific conditions that we describe, the phenomenon is more rapid than previously observed. Alkalinization is linked to carbon deprivation, as it occurs in glucose-poor media and requires exogenous amino acids. These conditions are similar to those predicted to exist inside phagocytic cells, and we find a strong correlation between the use of amino acids as a cellular carbon source and the degree of alkalinization. Genetic and genomic approaches indicate an emphasis on amino acid uptake and catabolism in alkalinizing cells. Mutations in four genes, STP2, a transcription factor regulating amino acid permeases, ACH1 (acetyl-coenzyme A [acetyl-CoA] hydrolase), DUR1,2 (urea amidolyase), and ATO5, a putative ammonia transporter, abolish or delay neutralization. The pH changes are the result of the extrusion of ammonia, as observed in other fungi. We propose that nutrient-deprived C. albicans cells catabolize amino acids as a carbon source, excreting the amino nitrogen as ammonia to raise environmental pH and stimulate morphogenesis, thus directly contributing to pathogenesis. IMPORTANCE Candida albicans is the most important fungal pathogen of humans, causing disease at multiple body sites. The ability to switch between multiple morphologies, including a rounded yeast cell and an elongated hyphal cell, is a key virulence trait in this species, as this reversible switch is thought to promote dissemination and tissue invasion in the host. We report here that C. albicans can actively alter the pH of its environment and induce its switch to the hyphal form. The change in pH is caused by the release of ammonia from the cells produced during the breakdown of amino acids. This phenomenon is unprecedented in a human pathogen and may substantially impact host physiology by linking morphogenesis, pH adaptation, carbon metabolism, and interactions with host cells, all of which are critical for the ability of C. albicans to cause disease. Candida albicans is the most important fungal pathogen of humans, causing disease at multiple body sites. The ability to switch between multiple morphologies, including a rounded yeast cell and an elongated hyphal cell, is a key virulence trait in this species, as this reversible switch is thought to promote dissemination and tissue invasion in the host. We report here that C. albicans can actively alter the pH of its environment and induce its switch to the hyphal form. The change in pH is caused by the release of ammonia from the cells produced during the breakdown of amino acids. This phenomenon is unprecedented in a human pathogen and may substantially impact host physiology by linking morphogenesis, pH adaptation, carbon metabolism, and interactions with host cells, all of which are critical for the ability of C. albicans to cause disease.
339 sitasi
en
Medicine, Biology
A flexible pH sensor based on the iridium oxide sensing film
W. Huang, H. Cao, S. Deb
et al.
333 sitasi
en
Materials Science
pH-induced shape-memory polymers.
Xiaona Han, Zhenqiang Dong, Minmin Fan
et al.
276 sitasi
en
Materials Science, Medicine
High-pH reversed-phase chromatography with fraction concatenation for 2D proteomic analysis
Feng Yang, Yufeng Shen, D. Camp
et al.
271 sitasi
en
Chemistry, Medicine
pH-Responsive Cellulose Nanocrystal Gels and Nanocomposites.
Amanda E. Way, L. Hsu, K. Shanmuganathan
et al.
260 sitasi
en
Medicine, Materials Science