The water permeability of toad urinary bladder. I. Permeability of barriers in series with the luminal membrane.
Open Access
- 1 April 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 83 (4) , 529-541
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.83.4.529
Abstract
Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) induces a large increase in the water permeability of the luminal membrane of toad urinary bladder. Measured values of the diffusional water permeability coefficient, Pd(w), are spuriously low, however, because of barriers within the tissue, in series with the luminal membrane, that impede diffusion. We have now determined the water permeability coefficient of these series barriers in fully stretched bladders and find it to be approximately 6.3 X 10(-4) cm/s. This is equivalent to an unstirred aqueous layer of approximately 400 microns. On the other hand, the permeability coefficient of the bladder to a lipophilic molecule, hexanol, is approximately 9.0 X 10(-4) cm/s. This is equivalent to an unstirred aqueous layer of only 100 microns. The much smaller hindrance to hexanol diffusion than to water diffusion by the series barriers implies a lipophilic component to the barriers. We suggest that membrane-enclosed organelles may be so tightly packed within the cytoplasm of granular epithelial cells that they offer a substantial impediment to diffusion of water through the cell. Alternatively, the lipophilic component of the barrier could be the plasma membranes of the basal cells, which cover most of the basement membrane and thereby may restrict water transport to the narrow spaces between basal and granular cells.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
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