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PERMEABLE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEXES : The Movement of Lanthanum across Rabbit Gallbladder and Intestine

Ionic lanthanum has been used to study transepithelial ion permeation in in vitro rabbit gallbladder and intestine (ileum) by adding 1 mM La(3+) to only the mucosal bathing solution. Transepithelial fluid transport electrical potential differences (p.d.), and resistances were measured. During La(3+)...

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Autores principales: Machen, Terry E., Erlij, David, Wooding, F. B. P.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1972
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2108875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5040861
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author Machen, Terry E.
Erlij, David
Wooding, F. B. P.
author_facet Machen, Terry E.
Erlij, David
Wooding, F. B. P.
author_sort Machen, Terry E.
collection PubMed
description Ionic lanthanum has been used to study transepithelial ion permeation in in vitro rabbit gallbladder and intestine (ileum) by adding 1 mM La(3+) to only the mucosal bathing solution. Transepithelial fluid transport electrical potential differences (p.d.), and resistances were measured. During La(3+) treatment the gallbladder's rate of active solute-coupled fluid transport remained constant, the resistance increased, and the 2:1 NaCl diffusion p.d. decreased. Mucosa-to-serosa fluxes of (140)La(3+) were measured and indicate a finite permeability of the gallbladder to La(3+). La(3+) also increased the transepithelial resistance and p d. of ileum. Electron microscopic examination of La(3+)-treated gallbladder showed: (a) good preservation of the fine structure, (b) electron-opaque lanthanum precipitates in almost every lateral intercellular space, most frequently near the apical end of the lateral spaces close to or within the junctional complex, (c) lanthanum among the subjacent muscle and connective tissue layers, and (d) lanthanum filling almost the entire length of so-called "tight" junctions. No observations were made which unequivocally showed the penetration of lanthanum into the gallbladder cells. Electron micrographs of similar La(3+)-treated ilea showed lanthanum deposits penetrating the junctional complexes. These results coupled with other physiological studies indicate that the low resistance pathway for transepithelial ion permeation in gallbladder and ileum is through the tight junctions A division of salt-transporting epithelia into two main groups, those with "leaky" junctional complexes and those with tight junctional complexes, has been proposed.
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spelling pubmed-21088752008-05-01 PERMEABLE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEXES : The Movement of Lanthanum across Rabbit Gallbladder and Intestine Machen, Terry E. Erlij, David Wooding, F. B. P. J Cell Biol Article Ionic lanthanum has been used to study transepithelial ion permeation in in vitro rabbit gallbladder and intestine (ileum) by adding 1 mM La(3+) to only the mucosal bathing solution. Transepithelial fluid transport electrical potential differences (p.d.), and resistances were measured. During La(3+) treatment the gallbladder's rate of active solute-coupled fluid transport remained constant, the resistance increased, and the 2:1 NaCl diffusion p.d. decreased. Mucosa-to-serosa fluxes of (140)La(3+) were measured and indicate a finite permeability of the gallbladder to La(3+). La(3+) also increased the transepithelial resistance and p d. of ileum. Electron microscopic examination of La(3+)-treated gallbladder showed: (a) good preservation of the fine structure, (b) electron-opaque lanthanum precipitates in almost every lateral intercellular space, most frequently near the apical end of the lateral spaces close to or within the junctional complex, (c) lanthanum among the subjacent muscle and connective tissue layers, and (d) lanthanum filling almost the entire length of so-called "tight" junctions. No observations were made which unequivocally showed the penetration of lanthanum into the gallbladder cells. Electron micrographs of similar La(3+)-treated ilea showed lanthanum deposits penetrating the junctional complexes. These results coupled with other physiological studies indicate that the low resistance pathway for transepithelial ion permeation in gallbladder and ileum is through the tight junctions A division of salt-transporting epithelia into two main groups, those with "leaky" junctional complexes and those with tight junctional complexes, has been proposed. The Rockefeller University Press 1972-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2108875/ /pubmed/5040861 Text en Copyright © 1972 by The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Machen, Terry E.
Erlij, David
Wooding, F. B. P.
PERMEABLE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEXES : The Movement of Lanthanum across Rabbit Gallbladder and Intestine
title PERMEABLE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEXES : The Movement of Lanthanum across Rabbit Gallbladder and Intestine
title_full PERMEABLE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEXES : The Movement of Lanthanum across Rabbit Gallbladder and Intestine
title_fullStr PERMEABLE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEXES : The Movement of Lanthanum across Rabbit Gallbladder and Intestine
title_full_unstemmed PERMEABLE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEXES : The Movement of Lanthanum across Rabbit Gallbladder and Intestine
title_short PERMEABLE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEXES : The Movement of Lanthanum across Rabbit Gallbladder and Intestine
title_sort permeable junctional complexes : the movement of lanthanum across rabbit gallbladder and intestine
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2108875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5040861
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