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Fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach.

Whole gland perfusion technique was applied to rat parotid glands to assess whether amylase affects fluid secretion. Control perfusion without any secretagogue evoked no spontaneous secretion. Carbachol (CCh 1 microM) induced both amylase and fluid secretion with distinctive kinetics. Fluid secretio...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Murakami, M, Yoshimura, K, Sugiya, H, Segawa, A, Loffredo, F, Testa-Riva, F, Riva, A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3202185/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10981508
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author Murakami, M
Yoshimura, K
Sugiya, H
Segawa, A
Loffredo, F
Testa-Riva, F
Riva, A
author_facet Murakami, M
Yoshimura, K
Sugiya, H
Segawa, A
Loffredo, F
Testa-Riva, F
Riva, A
author_sort Murakami, M
collection PubMed
description Whole gland perfusion technique was applied to rat parotid glands to assess whether amylase affects fluid secretion. Control perfusion without any secretagogue evoked no spontaneous secretion. Carbachol (CCh 1 microM) induced both amylase and fluid secretion with distinctive kinetics. Fluid secretion occurred constantly around 60 microL/g-min, whereas amylase secretion exhibited an initial peak, followed by a rapid decrease to reach a plateau. Isoproterenol (Isop 1 microM) alone did not induce fluid secretion although it evoked amylase secretion as measured in isolated perfused acini. Addition of Isop during CCh stimulation evoked a rapid and large rise in amylase secretion accompanied by small increase in oxygen consumption. Morphological observations carried out by HR SEM and TEM revealed exocytotic profiles following Isop stimulation. CCh stimulation alone seldom showed exocytotic profiles, suggesting a low incidence of amylase secretion during copious fluid secretion. Combined stimulation of CCh and Isop induced both vacuolation and exocytosis along intercellular canaliculi. These findings suggest that control of salivary fluid secretion is independent of the amylase secretion system induced by CCh and/or Isop.
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spelling pubmed-32021852011-10-27 Fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach. Murakami, M Yoshimura, K Sugiya, H Segawa, A Loffredo, F Testa-Riva, F Riva, A J Korean Med Sci Research Article Whole gland perfusion technique was applied to rat parotid glands to assess whether amylase affects fluid secretion. Control perfusion without any secretagogue evoked no spontaneous secretion. Carbachol (CCh 1 microM) induced both amylase and fluid secretion with distinctive kinetics. Fluid secretion occurred constantly around 60 microL/g-min, whereas amylase secretion exhibited an initial peak, followed by a rapid decrease to reach a plateau. Isoproterenol (Isop 1 microM) alone did not induce fluid secretion although it evoked amylase secretion as measured in isolated perfused acini. Addition of Isop during CCh stimulation evoked a rapid and large rise in amylase secretion accompanied by small increase in oxygen consumption. Morphological observations carried out by HR SEM and TEM revealed exocytotic profiles following Isop stimulation. CCh stimulation alone seldom showed exocytotic profiles, suggesting a low incidence of amylase secretion during copious fluid secretion. Combined stimulation of CCh and Isop induced both vacuolation and exocytosis along intercellular canaliculi. These findings suggest that control of salivary fluid secretion is independent of the amylase secretion system induced by CCh and/or Isop. Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 2000-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3202185/ /pubmed/10981508 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Murakami, M
Yoshimura, K
Sugiya, H
Segawa, A
Loffredo, F
Testa-Riva, F
Riva, A
Fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach.
title Fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach.
title_full Fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach.
title_fullStr Fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach.
title_full_unstemmed Fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach.
title_short Fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach.
title_sort fluid and amylase secretion by perfused parotid gland: physio-morphological approach.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3202185/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10981508
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