Crabbé, J.
Beaujean, Viviane
[UCL]
Devuyst, Olivier
As a rule, chloride movement (JC1-) across amphibian skin is considered to be passive; this is implied in fact for preparations incubated in Ringer's fluid, since short-circuit current (Isc) is the quantitative expression of net, active sodium transport (JNa+). The nature of the Cl- pathway(s) was investigated by incubating amphibian skin (mostly Bufo marinus) with Cl- present on the epithelial side only, and after blocking JNa+ by combined treatment with ouabain and amiloride. In such conditions, JCl- was found to be equal to (reversed) Isc; furthermore, when JCl- was "translated" in terms of conductance, gCl-, the latter accounted almost quantitatively for transepithelial conductance, g1. When residual intratissue (i.e. intracellular) electronegativity was eliminated by replacing Na+ with K+, JCl- was larger but Isc and JCl- were still found to reflect each other, and gCl- again accounted for most, if not all, of g1. JCl- in the opposite direction, as a result of Cl- being present only on the dermal side, was negligible, and g1 was very low. Thus, in the absence of sodium transport, when experimental conditions are such that a net inward JCl- obtains, the anion apparently flows only through (a) conductive pathway(s). Aldosterone is probably involved in the regulation of this pathway, as JCl- was much lower when toads were maintained in dilute saline than in water or on moist peat; so was the fraction of the apical surface corresponding to mitochondria-rich cells.
Bibliographic reference |
Crabbé, J. ; Beaujean, Viviane ; Devuyst, Olivier. Stimulation by aldosterone of a conductive chloride pathway in toad skin.. In: Biology of the cell / under the auspices of the European Cell Biology Organization, Vol. 66, no. 1-2, p. 173-7 (1989) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/13946 |