1957
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.1957.sp005749
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The action of cardiac glycosides on sodium and potassium movements in human red cells

Abstract: This paper describes the effects of a number of cardiac glycosides on the movements of sodium and potassium across the human red cell membrane. A preliminary account of some of the experiments reported here has already been published (Glynn, 1955). The aim of the work was, first, to decide whether the glycosides acted directly on the transport mechanism, and, secondly, to see if the effects of the glycosides could be made to yield any information about the molecular basis of cation transport.Many substances af… Show more

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Cited by 651 publications
(344 citation statements)
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“…Sodium fluoride had no effect on the internal potential even when present for more than an hour at 10 mM. The cardiac glycoside, ouabain, which is known to inhibit the so called transport ATPases in m a n y animal systems (15), reduced the transsurface potential difference in Neurospora by only 20 mv at the highest concentration tested, 2 rag. Ouabain has also been found to have no significant effect on growth or potassium uptake in Neurospora (36).…”
Section: Effects Of Respiratory Inhibitors Upon the Internal Potentialmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Sodium fluoride had no effect on the internal potential even when present for more than an hour at 10 mM. The cardiac glycoside, ouabain, which is known to inhibit the so called transport ATPases in m a n y animal systems (15), reduced the transsurface potential difference in Neurospora by only 20 mv at the highest concentration tested, 2 rag. Ouabain has also been found to have no significant effect on growth or potassium uptake in Neurospora (36).…”
Section: Effects Of Respiratory Inhibitors Upon the Internal Potentialmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The inhibitory effect of ouabain on ion transport is well documented (see Glynn, 1964). Since DPH and K decrease ouabain accumulation at both inotropic and-arrhythmic concentrations, the prevention of ion changes may be due to the decrease of the ouabain concentration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But, as James Black pointed out in stating his credo, all biomedical researchers use drugs as tools [11], and many in other disciplines have contributed to pharmacology. Being a physiologist studying, for example, the mechanism of action of cardiac glycosides [12] does not necessarily make you a pharmacologist. Black proposed other criteria that he thought define a pharmacologist.…”
Section: Clinical Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacologistsmentioning
confidence: 99%