Affiliation:
1. Department of Physiology, Texas Tech University Health SciencesCenter, Lubbock 79430, USA.
Abstract
These experiments were designed to examine the effects of A-23187 (5 x 10(-4) M) and verapamil (100 microM) on membrane transport, 45Ca fluxes, and adenosine-triphosphatase (ATPase) activities in turtle bladder. In the intact membrane, the calcium ionophore decreased proton secretion and sodium transport [short-circuit current (SCC)] to approximately the same degree (by approximately 55% at 30 min). During the same period of time, verapamil decreased SCC (by approximately 58%), but proton secretion was unaffected. The turtle bladder membrane is composed predominantly of two cell types: 1) the mitochondrial-rich cells (MR cells) thought to be involved in proton (and bicarbonate) secretion containing significant H(+)-ATPase and Ca(2+)-ATPase and 2) the granular cells (G cells), postulated important in sodium reabsorption, having abundant Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase. That Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity was unchanged by either a calcium ionophore or a calcium channel blocker suggests that the decrease in SCC noted in the intact membrane is not directly mediated by changes in the sodium "pump." The decrease of H(+)-ATPase in MR cells, which resulted after the A-23187, suggests that it probably exerts a direct action on the proton pump, which decreases hydrogen ion secretion. The increase in ATP-dependent 45Ca transport seen after the ionophore (or the decrease in ATP-independent 45Ca transport after verapamil) most likely reflects increased (or decreased) Ca2+ availability within the cytosol, and the high (or low) cell calcium could decrease the SCC. These results thus suggest that cytosolic Ca2+ reciprocally sets, by different mechanisms, the rate of proton secretion in MR cells and the sodium reabsorption in G cells.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
2 articles.
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