Abstract
Summary
Nuclear and total cell volume changes have been studied as a function of extracellular osmotic gradients in respiring rat liver slices. The nucleus and intact cell respond approximately as osmometers in a manner suggesting that the intracellular water activity is the same in the nucleus and cytoplasm of the cell. A mean increase of 37.2% or a mean decrease of 22.3% of cell water volume did not significantly change the cell O2 uptake when compared with cell O2 uptake at isotonicity although the O2 uptake was significantly increased in cells respiring in hypertonic solutions when compared with cells respiring in hypotonic solutions.
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