Abstract

The volume-activated chloride channel (VACC) serves vital cellular functions in secretion and cell volume regulation via regulatory volume decrease (RVD) in various epithelia. Previously, we have shown that RVD in primary CF mouse cholangiocytes is impaired. Thus, the effect of CFTR defect on VACC and RVD in CF human immortalized cholangiocyte cell (HBDC) was examined in comparison with those in normal HBDC by using cell volume measurement and whole-cell patch clamp techniques, respectively. The CF HBDC had an impaired RVD, which was not further inhibited by removing the extracellular calcium or administering BAPTA-AM, NPPB, or DIDS. When exposed to a hypotonic solution, CF HBDC exhibited large, outwardly rectified currents with time-dependent inactivation at a positive potential. The amplitude of the outward currents was about three times that of the inward currents. The amplitude and reversal potential of VACC was dependent on chloride concentration. The VACC was significantly inhibited by replacing chloride with gluconate, glutamate, sucrose, or acetate in the hypotonic solution as well as by an administration of NPPB or tamoxifen, classical VACC inhibitors. Surprisingly, the VACC amplitude is greater in CF HBDC than in normal HBDC, suggesting that the channel density or open probability of VACC is increased, thus CFTR may have inhibitory effects on VACC. On the contrary, the amplitude of the volume-activated potassium current is lower in CF HBDC, suggesting the potassium channel density or open probability is decreased in CF cholangiocytes and/or CFTR may have regulatory effects on volume-activated potassium current. In conclusion, RVD is impaired in CF human cholangiocytes. The VACC of CF human cholangiocytes has similar electrophysiological characteristics as that of normal cholangiocytes but its activity is augmented in CF cholangiocytes, while volume-activated potassium current is decreased in CF human cholangiocytes, providing a fundamental underlying pathophysiologic mechanism for the impaired RVD in CF cholangiocytes.

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