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Exposure of the Isolated Frog Skin to High Potassium Concentrations at the Internal Surface : II. Changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone

Isolated frog skin epithelia undergo marked, but reversible swelling when the external skin surface is bathed with conventional NaCl Ringer's and the internal surface with KCl Ringer's solutions. In 2 hours, epithelial thickness increased by over twofold. When NaCl Ringer's was replac...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ussing, Hans H., Biber, Thomas U. L., Bricker, Neal S.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1965
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2195427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14284777
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author Ussing, Hans H.
Biber, Thomas U. L.
Bricker, Neal S.
author_facet Ussing, Hans H.
Biber, Thomas U. L.
Bricker, Neal S.
author_sort Ussing, Hans H.
collection PubMed
description Isolated frog skin epithelia undergo marked, but reversible swelling when the external skin surface is bathed with conventional NaCl Ringer's and the internal surface with KCl Ringer's solutions. In 2 hours, epithelial thickness increased by over twofold. When NaCl Ringer's was replaced on both sides of the skin, volume returned to control levels in less than 1 hour. When sulfate, rather than chloride, was the predominant anion, exposure of the internal surface to high potassium concentrations did not evoke changes in epithelial cell volume. With both KCl and K(2)SO(4) Ringer's, an immediate drop in DC resistance across the skin occurred. This was followed by partial recovery. Both the immediate drop and partial recovery were unrelated to changes in volume. A slow, sustained secondary drop in resistance was observed with KCl but not K(2)SO(4) Ringer's. This slower drop was associated temporally with swelling. When epithelial cell swelling occurred (i.e. with KCl Ringer's), the characteristic response of the skin to vasopressin was abolished. However, with sulfate as anion, vasopressin elicited an increase in short-circuit current and/or in cell volume despite high internal potassium concentrations. It is concluded that epithelial swelling increased the permeability of the sodium-selective barrier at the external surface of the cells; and the possibility exists that stretching of cell membranes altered dimensions of pathways through which Na and water move, thereby mimicking the effects of vasopressin.
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spelling pubmed-21954272008-04-23 Exposure of the Isolated Frog Skin to High Potassium Concentrations at the Internal Surface : II. Changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone Ussing, Hans H. Biber, Thomas U. L. Bricker, Neal S. J Gen Physiol Article Isolated frog skin epithelia undergo marked, but reversible swelling when the external skin surface is bathed with conventional NaCl Ringer's and the internal surface with KCl Ringer's solutions. In 2 hours, epithelial thickness increased by over twofold. When NaCl Ringer's was replaced on both sides of the skin, volume returned to control levels in less than 1 hour. When sulfate, rather than chloride, was the predominant anion, exposure of the internal surface to high potassium concentrations did not evoke changes in epithelial cell volume. With both KCl and K(2)SO(4) Ringer's, an immediate drop in DC resistance across the skin occurred. This was followed by partial recovery. Both the immediate drop and partial recovery were unrelated to changes in volume. A slow, sustained secondary drop in resistance was observed with KCl but not K(2)SO(4) Ringer's. This slower drop was associated temporally with swelling. When epithelial cell swelling occurred (i.e. with KCl Ringer's), the characteristic response of the skin to vasopressin was abolished. However, with sulfate as anion, vasopressin elicited an increase in short-circuit current and/or in cell volume despite high internal potassium concentrations. It is concluded that epithelial swelling increased the permeability of the sodium-selective barrier at the external surface of the cells; and the possibility exists that stretching of cell membranes altered dimensions of pathways through which Na and water move, thereby mimicking the effects of vasopressin. The Rockefeller University Press 1965-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2195427/ /pubmed/14284777 Text en Copyright © 1965 by The Rockefeller Institute 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
Ussing, Hans H.
Biber, Thomas U. L.
Bricker, Neal S.
Exposure of the Isolated Frog Skin to High Potassium Concentrations at the Internal Surface : II. Changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone
title Exposure of the Isolated Frog Skin to High Potassium Concentrations at the Internal Surface : II. Changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone
title_full Exposure of the Isolated Frog Skin to High Potassium Concentrations at the Internal Surface : II. Changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone
title_fullStr Exposure of the Isolated Frog Skin to High Potassium Concentrations at the Internal Surface : II. Changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone
title_full_unstemmed Exposure of the Isolated Frog Skin to High Potassium Concentrations at the Internal Surface : II. Changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone
title_short Exposure of the Isolated Frog Skin to High Potassium Concentrations at the Internal Surface : II. Changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone
title_sort exposure of the isolated frog skin to high potassium concentrations at the internal surface : ii. changes in epithelial cell volume, resistance and response to antidiuretic hormone
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2195427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14284777
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