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Butterfield, D Allan

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The effects of the extracellular manganese concentration and variation of the interpulse delay time in the CPMG sequence on water exchange time across erythrocyte membranes.

L N Chao; D A Butterfield (Profiled Author: Butterfield, D Allan)

Department of Chemistry, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40506-0055.
Biochimica et biophysica acta 1990;1028(3):245-50.

Abstract

There has been broad disagreement in the literature regarding the dependence of water exchange times (Te) across erythrocyte membranes studied by the 1H-NMR Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) pulse sequence on extracellular Mn2+ concentration. While some workers saw no change in Te with Mn2+, others reported a 35-50% decrease in Te with this extracellular paramagnetic relaxation agent. We present 1H-NMR evidence that a 30-50% change in Te can be produced by interdependence of the interpulse delay time of the CPMG pulse sequence and the external Mn2+ concentration. Such a large dependency is interpreted in terms of the diffusional effect as a major source. However, it is shown experimentally that if a large number of refocusing pi pulses are used, the observed transverse relaxation times are unaffected by Mn2+. Under these conditions excellent agreement of Te obtained in our study (13.0 +/- 0.64 ms (N = 36) at 21 degrees C) and that of 12.8 +/- 3.6 ms at 20-23 degrees C reported by the radiotracer method was found. Our findings suggest new and important implications for evaluating the previous reports of the 1H-NMR CPMG method concerning the [Mn2+] effect in the decrease of Te, and provide conditions where studies of water transport across erythrocyte membranes using this magnetic resonance method can be used with confidence.

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