Affiliation:
1. Clinical Investigations and Patient Care Branch, National Institute ofDental Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland20892.
Abstract
The Cl(-)- and HCO3(-)-dependent components of muscarinic agonist (carbachol)-induced K+ loss from a rat parotid mince were studied using 86Rb+ as a K+ marker. Both components of 86Rb+ loss were blunted by K+ and Cl- channel blockers and by removal of extracellular Ca2+, consistent with the hypothesis that 86Rb+ loss occurs via a Ca(2+)-activated K+ channel and that this cation loss serves to electrically balance a concomitant loss of the corresponding anion via one or more conductive pathways (channels). Two tissue "pools" of 86Rb+ were observed, a carbachol-sensitive pool and a carbachol-insensitive pool (approximately 70 and approximately 30% of the total 86Rb+ content, respectively). There was no evidence for a time-dependent desensitization of the muscarinic response of the carbachol-sensitive pool. Cl(-)-dependent 86Rb+ loss was not affected by HCO3- addition, suggesting that both Cl- and HCO3- secretion are accompanied by 86Rb+ loss from the same pool and thus occur from the same cells. HCO3(-)-dependent 86Rb+ loss was not enhanced by lowering the extracellular Na+ concentration, indicating that the HCO3- exit pathway is not a Na(+)-HCO3- symport. The data are consistent with the postulate that Cl- and HCO3- are secreted by rat parotid acinar cells via the same or very similar conductive transport pathways in response to muscarinic stimulation.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology,Physiology
Cited by
14 articles.
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