Abstract

In isolated frog skin at least three different types of cells are engaged in the transepithelial ion and water transport; these are the granular cells, the mitochondria-rich cells and the glandular cells. The experiments presented were carried out on isolated frog skin bathed in Cl- or NO3- Ringer's solution, where the active transepithelial Na+ uptake via the granular cells was blocked by amiloride. Transepithelial current and water flow were measured. When a negative current was passed across the skins (the skins were clamped at -100 mV), the current was mainly carried by a net influx of Cl- via the mitochondria-rich cells. The current had no effect on the transepithelial water movement. This finding indicates that there is nearly no coupling between the Cl- flux and the movement of water via the mitochondria-rich cells. Prostaglandin E2 activates the glandular cells of the exocrine glands in the skin. When prostaglandin E2 was added under these experimental conditions (the skins were clamped at -100 mV, with amiloride in the apical bathing solution, and the glandular secretion of ions was blocked by the use of NO3- Ringer's solution), then the transepithelial current became more negative. This change in current was mainly due to an increase in the Na+ efflux via the glands. Thus PGE2 increase the Na+ conductance of the skin glands. Together with this increase in the Na+ efflux a highly significant increase in the water secretion was observed. The water movement (secretion) across the skin was under these conditions coupled to the PGE2-induced efflux of Na+, and when one Na+ was pulled from the basolateral to the apical solution via this pathway 215 molecules of water followed. This must be due to electro-osmosis (friction between ions and water) or current-induced local osmosis.

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