Pratz J, Ripoche P, Corman B
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1986 Oct 9;861(2):395-7. doi: 10.1016/0005-2736(86)90446-3.
Solute reflection coefficients, sigma i, of rat kidney brush-border membrane vesicles were determined by the comparison of water flows induced by equiosmolal gradients of sucrose and NaCl, KCl or mannitol. The values of 0.53 for sigma NaCl and 0.56 for sigma KCl when compared with 0.92 for sigma mannitol suggested some interactions between salt and water pathways. Altering the membrane proteins with 0.4 mM HgCl2 decreased the osmotic water permeability of the vesicles by 70 to 80% and brought sigma NaCl and sigma KCl to a value not different from 1. This argued in favor of water protein pathways in the luminal membrane of kidney proximal cells which are partly accessible to NaCl and KCl.