Abstract
Maintenance of a hydrated integument is essential to the normal function of amphibian skin, and amphibians have developed mechanisms to minimize cutaneous dessication. The present work was conducted on skins of amphibians exhibiting a clear preference for either of two such mechanisms to study the influence of such mechanisms on the characteristics of epithelial transport. The response to norepinephrine (NE) was studied in isolated skins of a semiaquatic frog ( Leptodactylus chaquensis), known to maintain indispensable skin moisture by secreting a superficial film of mucus via sympathetic stimulation of skin glands, and a terrestrial toad ( Bufoarenarum), which replenishes a superficial film of fluid by drawing soil water upward by capillarity. In L. chaquensis skin, NE 5.0 × 10 −7 M, induced slow onset, sustained increases in short-circuit current (SCC) and transepithelial conductance, which were abolished by amiloride, a specific sodium transport inhibitor. At 1.2 × 10 −5 M, the response to NE exhibited a faster onset and a shorter time course. The SCC response also became insensitive to amiloride and could thus be induced by exposing the skin to NE in the presence of the inhibitor. The response was also greatly reduced in the absence of chloride, strongly suggesting a greater dependence on the glandular secretory response. In B. arenarum skin, the response to NE was far more sensitive to amiloride, regardless of the concentration of NE used. Induction of a response in the amiloride-blocked skin required a 10-fold higher concentration of NE, and the resulting effect was still considerably smaller than that observed in the skin of L. chaquensis after the same treatment. The number of mucous glands per unit area in B. arenarum skin was found to be around one-fifth of that observed in L. chaquensis, thus in part explaining the difference in the magnitude of the responses. The response of the skin of L. chaquensis to NE in the presence of sulfate was found to be consistent with the postulated involvement of frog skin glands in sulfate excretion. In contrast, this function was not evident in the skin of B. arenarum. The pattern of response of B. arenarum skin to all concentrations of NE tested closely resembles that seen after exposure to agents known to activate a cyclic AMP-dependent, high-permeability Cl − pathway previously described by us in the skin of the toad. Our observations underscore the physiological differences existing in skins from different species, particularly regarding the relative importance of the glandular component of transport.
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More From: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology -- Part A: Physiology
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