Vascular aspects of water uptake mechanisms in the toad skin: perfusion, diffusion, confusion.

Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol

Institute of Molecular Biology and Physiology, August Krogh Building, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Published: September 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Blood cell flow (BCF) in the toad skin increased significantly when dehydrated toads came into contact with water, but then gradually decreased as they rehydrated.
  • Water absorption during rehydration did not correlate with changes in BCF, indicating that blood flow is not directly necessary for water absorption.
  • Aquaporins were identified in the skin, and toads rehydrated faster from dilute salt solutions (like NaCl) compared to pure water, suggesting that other factors besides blood circulation and solute coupling influence water absorption rates.

Article Abstract

Blood cell flow (BCF) in the water absorbing "seat patch" region of toad skin was measured with laser Doppler flow cytometry. BCF of dehydrated toads increased by a factor of 6-8 when water contact was made and declined gradually as toads rehydrated. Water absorption was initially stimulated and declined in parallel with BCF. Water absorption measured during the initial rehydration period did not correlate with BCF and hydrated toads injected with AVT increased water absorption without an increase in BCF indicating the lack of an obligate relation between blood flow and water absorption. Aquaporins 1-3 were characterized by RT-PCR analysis of seat patch skin. AQP 1 was localized in the endothelium of subepidermal capillaries and serves as a pathway for water absorption in series with the apical and basolateral membranes of the epithelium. Dehydrated toads rehydrated more rapidly from dilute NaCl solutions than from deionized water despite the reduced osmotic gradient. BCF of toads rehydrating on 50 mM NaCl was not different than on deionized water and blocking Na+ transport with 100 microM amiloride did not reduce water absorption from 50 mM NaCl. Thus, neither circulation nor solute coupling explains the greater absorption from dilute salt solutions. Rehydration from 10 mM CaCl2 was stimulated above that of DI water by a similar degree as with 50 mM NaCl suggesting the anion might control water permeability of the skin.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpa.2006.12.032DOI Listing

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