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. 1975 Dec 4;24(3-4):365-80.
doi: 10.1007/BF01868632.

Anion permeation in the proximal tubule of Necturus kidney: the shunt pathway

Anion permeation in the proximal tubule of Necturus kidney: the shunt pathway

T Anagnostopoulos. J Membr Biol. .

Abstract

The effect of foreign anions on transepithelial potential difference and transepithelial input conductance was studied in the isolated perfused Necturus kidney. Two microelectrodes (recording and current-injecting) were inserted into the lumen of single proximal tubules and the peritubular perfusate was shifted reversibly for 30-60 sec from a physiologic Ringer's solution to a test solution in which chloride was replaced isosmotically by a foreign anion. The permeability sequence, obtained by potential measurements, was: lactate less than glutamate less than gluconate less than pyruvate less than benzene sulfonate less than or equal to acetate less than or equal to F less than propionate less than BrO3 less than formate less than ClO3 less than Cl than ClO4 less than I less than or equal to Br less than NO3 less than SCN. Transepithelial conductance decreased when the tissue was perfused with anions less permeable than chloride but the conductance sequence was different from the permeability sequence. Such discrepancies were more pronounced during perfusion with hyperpolarizing anions; ClO4 and I- (both more permeable than chloride) produced an important decrease in transepithelial conductance, followed by incomplete reversibility when the perfusion was shifted again to chloride Ringer's. The results are best explained by the presence of weak positive fixed charges, governing anion permeation, at the shunt pathway of the proximal tubule. An analysis of the data allows tentative estimates of shape and size of the sites.

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