Affiliation:
1. From The Cell Physics Laboratory, Department of Physiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York 10032
Abstract
The permeability of the membrane surfaces where cells are in contact (junctional membranes) in Chironomus salivary glands depends on Ca++ and Mg++. When the concentration of these ions at the junctional membranes is raised sufficiently, these normally highly permeable membranes seal off; their permeability falls one to three orders, as they approach the nonjunctional membranes in conductance. This permeability transformation is achieved in three ways: (a) by iontophoresis of Ca++ into the cell; (b) by entry of Ca++ and/or Mg++ from the extracellular fluid into the cell through leaks in the cell surface membrane (e.g., injury); or (c) by entry of these ions through leaks arising, probably primarily in the perijunctional insulation, due to trypsin digestion, anisotonicity, alkalinity, or chelation. Ca++ and Mg++ appear to have three roles in the junctional coupling processes: (a) in the permeability of the junctional membranes; (b) in the permeability of the perijunctional insulation; and (c) a role long known— in the mechanical stability of the cell junction. The two latter roles may well be closely interdependent, but the first is clearly independent of the others.
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Cited by
190 articles.
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