ECB-ART-31895
	
		
	
	
Exp Cell Res
	
	 1989 Aug 01;1832:343-52. doi: 10.1016/0014-4827(89)90395-9.
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K+ activity and regulation of intracellular pH in the sea urchin egg during fertilization.
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Fertilization of the sea urchin egg is accompanied by changes in intracellular ion activities and transmembrane fluxes, which regulate the sequence of biochemical events of metabolic derepression. Changes in intracellular K+ activity during fertilization have been controversial and here we report our measurements using intracellular K+-sensitive microelectrodes. A small, but statistically significant, transient rise in internal K+ activity was detected during the first 10 min of fertilization. Since this change in K+ activity was ouabain sensitive, intracellular K+ activity in the fertilized egg appears to be regulated by the increased Na+, K+ ATPase activity, rather than the previously suggested K+ decompartmentalization. Increasing external K+ concentration was found to stimulate ouabain-sensitive alkalinization in the fertilized egg. The data are consistent with the possibility that Na+, K+ ATPase may regulate cytoplasmic pH by recycling Na+ that enters the cell through Na+-H+ antiport.
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Genes referenced: LOC100887844 LOC115919910 LOC581395