Effect of hydrostatic pressure on ADH induced osmotic water flow in toad bladder |
| |
Authors: | Bernard Rosenbaum Gerard Lombardo Vincent A. DiScala |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Renal Service, Department of Medicine, Bayley Seton Hospital, Bay Street and Vanderbilt Avenue, 10304 Staten Island, New York, USA;(2) Nassau Hospital, 259 First Street, 11501 Mineola, New York, USA;(3) Present address: The Methodist Hospital, 506 Sixth Street, 11215 Brooklyn, New York, USA |
| |
Abstract: | The effect of hydrostatic pressure (HP) on antidiuretic hormone (ADH) stimulated osmotic water flow (Jv) across the toad urinary bladder was evaluated. Jv for ADH-stimulated bladders was significantly reduced by an elevation of the serosal HP gradient to 1 cm H2O. Subsequent elimination of the HP gradient resulted in a recovery of Jv. Serosal HP also caused a reversible increase in sucrose permeability (P sucrose). For ADH-treated bladders fixed with glutaraldehyde during serosal HP exposure, subsequent exposure to a mucosal or serosal HP gradient caused acceleration or inhibition of Jv, respectively. The reduction in ADH-associated Jv with serosal HP was apparently caused by a back-flux of water through a paracellular pathway. Jv and P sucrose were not affected by mucosal HP during ADH stimulation. The results suggest a specific sensitivity of a paracellular pathway to a small serosal HP gradient in bladders with ADH-stimulated water flow. The reversibility of this effect on P sucrose suggests that the elements comprising the apical junctions are dynamic structures capable of recovering at least some of their permeability properties. |
| |
Keywords: | Hydrostatic pressure Toad bladder function Vasopressin |
本文献已被 PubMed SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|