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J Neurophysiol (November 26, 2008). doi:10.1152/jn.90840.2008
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Submitted on July 31, 2008
Revised on September 28, 2008
Accepted on November 20, 2008

Chloride Accumulation Drives Volume Dynamics Underlying Cell Proliferation and Migration

Christa Whelan Habela1, Nola Jean Ernest2, Amanda F Swindall3, and Harald Sontheimer1*

1 University of Alabama at Birmingham
2 Univeristy of Alabama at Birmingham
3 University of Alabama Birmingham

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sontheimer{at}uab.edu.

During brain development, progenitor cells migrate over long distances through narrow and tortuous extracellular spaces posing significant demands on the cells ability to alter cell volume. This phenotype is recapitulated in primary brain tumors. We demonstrate here that volume changes occurring spontaneously in these cells are mediated by the flux of Cl- along with obligated water across the cell membrane. To do so glioma cells accumulate Cl- to ~100 mM, a concentration 3-fold greater than predicted by the Nernst equation. Shunting this gradient through the sustained opening of exogenously expressed GABA-gated Cl- channels caused a 33% decrease in cell volume and impaired the ability of cells to migrate in a spatially constrained environment. Further, dividing cells condense their cytoplasm prior to mitosis, a phenomenon which is associated with the release of intracellular Cl- as indicated by a 40 mM decrease in [Cl-]i. These findings provide a new framework for considering the role of intracellular Cl- in glioma cells. Here, Cl- serves as an important osmotically active regulator of cell volume being the energetic driving force for volume changes required by immature cells in cell migration and proliferation. This mechanism which was studied in CNS malignancies may be shared with other immature cells in the brain as well.







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