Electron microprobe analysis of intracellular electrolytes in resting and isoproterenol-stimulated exocrine glands of frog skin
- 1 October 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in The Journal of Membrane Biology
- Vol. 86 (3) , 211-220
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01870600
Abstract
In the intact, in vitro frog skin, isoproterenol (ISO) stimulates and amiloride-insensitive increase in short-circuit current (SCC) that can be localized to the exocrine glands and is associated with secretion of chloride. To determine which cells in the glands respond to stimulation we measured the intracellular electrolyte concentrations of the various cell types of the mucous and seromucous glands of the skin using freeze-dried cryosections and electron microprobe analysis. In the resting state, the various cell types of the glands have intracellular electrolyte concentrations similar to the epithelial cells of the skin. Exposure to amiloride (10−4 m) has little effect on the concentration of Na and Cl in the cells of the glands. The effect of isoproterenol has two distinct phases. Analysis of glands in tissues frozen at the peak of the SCC response (13 min after addition of isoproterenol) shows that the only significant change is an increase in Na and Ca in a group of cells at the ductal pole of the acini of both gland types. These are termed “gland” cells. The duct cells and cells that secrete macromolecules did not show any significant changes at this timepoint. In the gland cells, after a one-hour exposure to isoproterenol the Na concentration is at prestimulation levels while Cl drops. There is also a smaller drop in Cl in the duct and skin epithelial cells. Ouabain, which can completely block the isoproterenol SCC response, has little short-term effect on Na and Cl in the control gland but accentuates the gain of Na and drop in Cl in the isoproterenol-treated condition. Bumetanide and, to a lesser extent, furosemide, also blocks the isoproterenol SCC response and causes a further drop in Cl. The results provide indirect evidence that a major portion of the ionic component of the gland secretion is produced by a distinct group of cells separate from those producing the macromolecular component and that the mechanism of secretion involves a Na:Cl coupled transport system linked to the activity of the basolateral Na pump.This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
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