In acute secretory diarrhoea the primary event driving fluid secretion is a transcellular, electrogenic, serosal to mucosal transport of chloride ions. Such transport requires the maintenance of an electrically negative cell membrane voltage, which is achieved through a basolateral outward leakage of potassium ions. The aim of this study was to investigate the nature of K(+) channel involvement in facilitating secretory processes in the human ileum. Muscle-stripped mucosal preparations of human ileal mucosa were set up in Ussing chambers for recording short-circuit current and transmucosal conductance. Escherichia coli heat-stable toxin and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) produced concentration-dependent increases in short-circuit current. Responses to the heat-stable toxin were unaffected by basolateral application of 4-aminopyridine (5 mM), glibenclamide (10 microM) or a combination of charybdotoxin (0.3 microM) plus apamin (0.3 microM). However, basolateral barium (0.2-5 mM) caused a concentration-dependent inhibition. Responses to VIP were similarly affected by barium (0.05-1 mM). These results suggested that electrogenic chloride transport by human ileal mucosa required the presence of basolateral K(+) channels. The use of selective K(+)-channel inhibitors and low concentrations of barium suggested that the channels involved might be of the inwardly rectifying type.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1211/0022357021008 | DOI Listing |
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