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Oxidants act as chemorepellents in Paramecium by stimulating an electrogenic plasma membrane reductase activity

  • SUNY Buffalo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Paramecium is a valuable eukaryotic model system for studying chemosensory transduction, adaptation and cellular sensory integration. While millimolar amounts of many attractants hyperpolarize and cause faster forward swimming, oxidants are repellents that depolarize and cause backward swimming at micromolar concentrations. The non-permeant oxidants cytochrome c, nitro blue tetrazolium and ferricyanide are repellents with half maximal concentrations of 0.4 μM, 2.2 μM and 100 μM respectively. In vivo reductase activities follow the same order of potencies. The concentration dependence of the cytochrome c reductase activity is well correlated with cytochrome c-induced depolarizations. This suggests that plasma membrane reduction of external cytochrome c is electrogenic, causing membrane depolarization and chemorepulsion. The reductase activity also appears to be voltage dependent. Depolarization by either K+, Na+, Ca+ or Mg+ correlates with inhibition of both in vivo reductase activities and cytochrome c-induced membrane potential changes. These responses were also seen in deciliated cells, showing that the body plasma membrane is sufficient for the response. Both chloroquine and diphenyleneiodonium inhibited reductase activities but only at unusually high concentrations. This activity showed no pH dependence in the physiological range. We propose that a plasma membrane bound NADPH-dependent reductase controls oxidant-induced depolarizations and consequent chemorepulsion.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)655-665
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology
Volume175
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1994

Keywords

  • Chemokinesis
  • Chemorepellent
  • Chemotaxis
  • Electrogenic
  • Reductase Paramecium

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