Potassium Transport by Flounder Intestinal Mucosa
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1984
Abstract
We studied the mechanisms of K transport across an epithelium in which NaCl absorption is mediated primarily by Na/K/Cl cotransport at the apical membrane. Rubidium served as a reliable K substitute; under control conditions, both K and Rb were actively secreted. During secretion, K (Rb) enters across the basolateral membrane via the Na/K pump and exits across the apical membrane through K conductance pathways, since serosal ouabain or mucosal barium abolished K secretion, mucosal furosemide or Cl-free media blocked K secretion by interfering with access of Na to the pump, and elevated mucosal solution [K] or [Rb] depolarized the apical membrane electrical potential difference. Mucosal Ba unmasked active Rb absorption that could be blocked by mucosal furosemide. These findings illustrate active K absorption and secretion across an epithelium that comprises a single cell type in which opposing K fluxes across the apical membrane are mediated by Na/K/Cl cotransport entry and conductive K exit. The direction of transepithelial K transport is determined by the relative activities of these pathways.
Repository Citation
Frizzell, R. A.,
Halm, D. R.,
Musch, M. W.,
Stewart, C. P.,
& Field, M.
(1984). Potassium Transport by Flounder Intestinal Mucosa. American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology, 246 (6), F946-F951.
https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/ncbp/976