Abstract

Paired hollow bullfrog lungs (Rana catesbeiana) were used to study the effects of lung inflation on alveolar epithelial transport of water and hydrophilic solutes. Frogs were double pithed and the lungs were removed after bronchial placement of a Lucite plug. Three openings in the plug accommodated the insertion of two agar-Ringer bridges (for electrical potential measurement and passage of direct current) and the injection and removal of alveolar bathing fluid. Ringer solution containing a tracer quantity of radioactive solute was instilled into the lung sacs (5 ml or 50 ml) and the lungs were suspended in baths of Ringer solution containng appropriate cold solutes (5 mM). Permeability properties of each solute (and water) were determined from the rate of radiotracer concentration change in the bath. The spontaneous potential difference, tissue resistance, and solute permeability properties determined in these experiments showed no significant differences between the 5- and 50-ml lungs. Assuming homogeneous, cylindrical water-filled pores to be present in the tissue, the equivalent pore radii estimated from the rates of solute and water fluxes were 1.1 (for 5-ml lungs) and 0.9 nm (for 50-ml lungs). After overinflation of the lung (to greater than 80 ml), experiments at 50 ml yielded a pore radius of 3.4 nm. These data suggest that passive alveolar epithelial transport properties do not change with degrees of lung inflation normally encountered in vivo but that overinflation can lead to increased leakiness of the barrier.

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