Bramham J, Riddell F G
Department of Chemistry, The University, St. Andrews, Scotland.
J Inorg Biochem. 1994 Feb 15;53(3):169-76. doi: 10.1016/0162-0134(94)80002-2.
The uptake of Cs+ ions into the erythrocytes of abstemious volunteers and of alcoholic patients was followed using 133Cs NMR. The uptake rates are approximately linear with a rate of 0.33 mM.h-1 at an extracellular Cs+ concentration of 10 mM. There is no discernible difference in the uptake rate between the two classes of subject despite earlier reports that Cs+ distribution is different and consequently that Cs+ transport might be anomalous in alcoholics. There is no evidence of saturation of the input rate and Cs(+)-loaded cells retain their Cs+ when incubated in a Cs(+)-free buffer, strongly suggesting that there is no transport mechanism for the removal of Cs+ from the erythrocyte. Experiments designed to ascertain which intracellular ion is being replaced by Cs+ indicate that it predominantly displaces K+.