Affiliation:
1. Departments of Physiology and Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455
Abstract
Alveolar epithelial cells were isolated from adult Sprague-Dawley rats and grown to confluence on membrane filters. Most of the basal short-circuit current ( I sc; 60%) was inhibited by amiloride (IC50 0.96 μM) or benzamil (IC50 0.5 μM). Basolateral addition of terbutaline (2 μM) produced a rapid decrease in I sc, followed by a slow recovery back to its initial amplitude. When Cl− was replaced with methanesulfonic acid, the basal I sc was reduced and the response to terbutaline was inhibited. In permeabilized monolayer experiments, both terbutaline and amiloride produced sustained decreases in current. The current-voltage relationship of the terbutaline-sensitive current had a reversal potential of −28 mV. Increasing Cl− concentration in the basolateral solution shifted the reversal potential to more depolarized voltages. These results were consistent with the existence of a terbutaline-activated Cl− conductance in the apical membrane. Terbutaline did not increase the amiloride-sensitive Na+ conductance. We conclude that β-adrenergic stimulation of adult alveolar epithelial cells results in an increase in apical Cl− permeability and that amiloride-sensitive Na+ channels are not directly affected by this stimulation.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
94 articles.
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