The Balance of Fluid and Osmotic Pressures across Active Biological Membranes with Application to the Corneal Endothelium.

The movement of fluid and solutes across biological membranes facilitates the transport of nutrients for living organisms and maintains the fluid and osmotic pressures in biological systems. Understanding the pressure balances across membranes is crucial for studying fluid and electrolyte homeostasi...

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Main Authors: Xi Cheng, Peter M Pinsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4697791?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-73872f84118c4261867fbab41e2bfacf2020-11-25T01:33:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011012e014542210.1371/journal.pone.0145422The Balance of Fluid and Osmotic Pressures across Active Biological Membranes with Application to the Corneal Endothelium.Xi ChengPeter M PinskyThe movement of fluid and solutes across biological membranes facilitates the transport of nutrients for living organisms and maintains the fluid and osmotic pressures in biological systems. Understanding the pressure balances across membranes is crucial for studying fluid and electrolyte homeostasis in living systems, and is an area of active research. In this study, a set of enhanced Kedem-Katchalsky (KK) equations is proposed to describe fluxes of water and solutes across biological membranes, and is applied to analyze the relationship between fluid and osmotic pressures, accounting for active transport mechanisms that propel substances against their concentration gradients and for fixed charges that alter ionic distributions in separated environments. The equilibrium analysis demonstrates that the proposed theory recovers the Donnan osmotic pressure and can predict the correct fluid pressure difference across membranes, a result which cannot be achieved by existing KK theories due to the neglect of fixed charges. The steady-state analysis on active membranes suggests a new pressure mechanism which balances the fluid pressure together with the osmotic pressure. The source of this pressure arises from active ionic fluxes and from interactions between solvent and solutes in membrane transport. We apply the proposed theory to study the transendothelial fluid pressure in the in vivo cornea, which is a crucial factor maintaining the hydration and transparency of the tissue. The results show the importance of the proposed pressure mechanism in mediating stromal fluid pressure and provide a new interpretation of the pressure modulation mechanism in the in vivo cornea.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4697791?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xi Cheng
Peter M Pinsky
spellingShingle Xi Cheng
Peter M Pinsky
The Balance of Fluid and Osmotic Pressures across Active Biological Membranes with Application to the Corneal Endothelium.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Xi Cheng
Peter M Pinsky
author_sort Xi Cheng
title The Balance of Fluid and Osmotic Pressures across Active Biological Membranes with Application to the Corneal Endothelium.
title_short The Balance of Fluid and Osmotic Pressures across Active Biological Membranes with Application to the Corneal Endothelium.
title_full The Balance of Fluid and Osmotic Pressures across Active Biological Membranes with Application to the Corneal Endothelium.
title_fullStr The Balance of Fluid and Osmotic Pressures across Active Biological Membranes with Application to the Corneal Endothelium.
title_full_unstemmed The Balance of Fluid and Osmotic Pressures across Active Biological Membranes with Application to the Corneal Endothelium.
title_sort balance of fluid and osmotic pressures across active biological membranes with application to the corneal endothelium.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The movement of fluid and solutes across biological membranes facilitates the transport of nutrients for living organisms and maintains the fluid and osmotic pressures in biological systems. Understanding the pressure balances across membranes is crucial for studying fluid and electrolyte homeostasis in living systems, and is an area of active research. In this study, a set of enhanced Kedem-Katchalsky (KK) equations is proposed to describe fluxes of water and solutes across biological membranes, and is applied to analyze the relationship between fluid and osmotic pressures, accounting for active transport mechanisms that propel substances against their concentration gradients and for fixed charges that alter ionic distributions in separated environments. The equilibrium analysis demonstrates that the proposed theory recovers the Donnan osmotic pressure and can predict the correct fluid pressure difference across membranes, a result which cannot be achieved by existing KK theories due to the neglect of fixed charges. The steady-state analysis on active membranes suggests a new pressure mechanism which balances the fluid pressure together with the osmotic pressure. The source of this pressure arises from active ionic fluxes and from interactions between solvent and solutes in membrane transport. We apply the proposed theory to study the transendothelial fluid pressure in the in vivo cornea, which is a crucial factor maintaining the hydration and transparency of the tissue. The results show the importance of the proposed pressure mechanism in mediating stromal fluid pressure and provide a new interpretation of the pressure modulation mechanism in the in vivo cornea.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4697791?pdf=render
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