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Hydrogenion flux

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Hydrogenion flux

Description

Volume-specific proton flux is measured in a closed system as the time derivative of proton concentration, expressed in units [pmol·s-1·mL-1. Proton flux can be measured in an open system at steady state, when any acidification of the medium is compensated by external supply of an equivalent amount of base. The extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) is the change of pH in the incubation medium over time, which is zero at steady state. Volume-specific proton flux is comparable to volume-specific [[oxygen flux] [pmol·s-1·mL-1]], which is the (negative) time derivative of oxygen concentration measured in a closed system.

pH is the negative logarithm of proton activity. Therefore, ECAR may be of interest in relation to acidification issues in the incubation buffer or culture medium. The physiologically relevant metabolic proton flux, however, must not be confused with ECAR.]]

Abbreviation: JH+

Reference: Gnaiger 2014 MitoPathways


MitoPedia concepts: MiP concept 


MitoPedia methods: Respirometry 




Proton flux versus glycolytic flux

  1. Measured changes in pH over time (ECAR) must be transformed from the logarithmic scale to the linear scale of proton flux.
  2. Measurement of extracellular proton production and glycolytic flux are related under specifically conrolled conditions. Such conditions must be carefully evaluated, may require modifications of protocols, and must be corrected for acid-base reactions unrelated to glycolytic flux.