Permeabilities of teleost and elasmobranch gill apical membranes: evidence that lipid bilayers alone do not account for barrier function

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Warren G Hill - , University of Pittsburgh (Author)
  • John C Mathai - (Author)
  • Rebekah H Gensure - (Author)
  • Joshua D Zeidel - (Author)
  • Gerard Apodaca - (Author)
  • James P Saenz - , Bottom-up Synthetic Biology (Junior Research Group), MDI Biological Laboratory (Author)
  • Evamaria Kinne-Saffran - (Author)
  • Rolf Kinne - (Author)
  • Mark L Zeidel - (Author)

Abstract

Teleosts and elasmobranchs faced with considerable osmotic challenges living in sea water, use compensatory mechanisms to survive the loss of water (teleosts) and urea (elasmobranchs) across epithelial surfaces. We hypothesized that the gill, with a high surface area for gas exchange must have an apical membrane of exceptionally low permeability to prevent equilibration between seawater and plasma. We isolated apical membrane vesicles from the gills of Pleuronectes americanus (winter flounder) and Squalus acanthias (dogfish shark) and demonstrated approximately sixfold enrichment of the apical marker, ADPase compared to homogenate. We also isolated basolateral membranes from shark gill (enriched 2.3-fold for Na-K-ATPase) and using stopped-flow fluorometry measured membrane permeabilities to water, urea, and NH(3). Apical membrane water permeabilities were similar between species and quite low (7.4 +/- 0.7 x 10(-4) and 6.6 +/- 0.8 x 10(-4) cm/s for shark and flounder, respectively), whereas shark basolateral membranes showed twofold higher water permeability (14 +/- 2 x 10(-4) cm/s). Permeabilities to urea and NH(3) were also low in apical membranes. Because of the much lower apical to basolateral surface area we conclude that the apical membrane represents an effective barrier. However, the values we obtained were not low enough to account for low water loss (teleosts) and urea loss (elasmobranchs) measured in vivo by others. We conclude that there are other mechanisms which permit gill epithelia to serve as effective barriers. This conclusion has implications for the function of other barrier epithelia, such as the gastric mucosa, mammalian bladder, and renal thick ascending limb.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)C235-42
Journal American journal of physiology / publ. by the American Physiological Society
Volume287
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2004
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 2942685903
ORCID /0000-0001-8901-4377/work/142232430

Keywords

Keywords

  • Ammonia/pharmacokinetics, Animals, Apyrase/metabolism, Cell Membrane/metabolism, Cell Membrane Permeability, Dogfish/metabolism, Flounder/metabolism, Gills/metabolism, Intracellular Membranes/metabolism, Lipid Bilayers/metabolism, Permeability, Urea/pharmacokinetics, Water/metabolism, Water-Electrolyte Balance

Library keywords