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First published online January 25, 2005
Journal of Experimental Biology 208, 523-537 (2005)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2005
doi: 10.1242/jeb.01417
Cell volume control in Paramecium: factors that activate the control mechanisms


Pacific Biomedical Research Center, Snyder Hall 306, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2538 The Mall, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA
Author for correspondence (e-mail:
naitoh{at}pbrc.hawaii.edu)
Accepted 30 November 2004
A fresh water protozoan Paramecium multimicronucleatum adapted to
a given solution was found to swell until the osmotic pressure difference
between the cytosol and the solution balanced the cytosolic pressure. The
cytosolic pressure was generated as the cell swelled osmotically. When either
one or both of these pressures was somehow modified, cell volume would change
until a new balance between these pressures was established. A hypothetical
osmolyte transport mechanism(s) was presumably activated when the cytosolic
pressure exceeded the threshold value of
1.5 x 105 Pa as
the cell swelled after its subjection to a decreased osmolarity. The cytosolic
osmolarity thereby decreased and the volume of the swollen cell resumed its
initial value. This corresponds to regulatory volume decrease (RVD). By
contrast, another hypothetical osmolyte transport mechanism(s) was activated
when the cell shrank after its subjection to an increased osmolarity. The
cytosolic osmolarity thereby increased and volume of the shrunken cell resumed
its initial value. This corresponds to regulatory volume increase (RVI). The
osmolyte transport mechanism responsible for RVD might be activated again when
the external osmolarity decreases further, and the cytosolic osmolarity
thereby decreases to the next lower level. Similarly, another osmolyte
transport mechanism responsible for RVI might be activated again when the
external osmolarity increases further, and the cytosolic osmolarity thereby
increases to the next higher level. Stepwise changes in the cytosolic
osmolarity caused by a gradual change in the adaptation osmolarity found in
P. multimicronucleatum is attributable to these osmolyte transport
mechanisms. An abrupt change in the amount of fluid discharged from the
contractile vacuole seen immediately after changing the external osmolarity
reduces an abrupt change in cell volume and thereby protects the cell from the
disruption of the plasma membrane by excessive stretch or dehydration during
shrinkage.
Key words: cell volume control, osmoreception, osmoregulation, RVI, RVD, cytosolic pressure, osmotic pressure, bulk modulus, contractile vacuole, Paramecium