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Citations to this article

Stimulation of osmotic water flow in toad bladder by prostaglandin E1. Evidence for different compartments of cyclic AMP.
J Flores, … , B Beckman, G W Sharp
J Flores, … , B Beckman, G W Sharp
Published August 1, 1975
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1975;56(2):256-262. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI108088.
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Research Article

Stimulation of osmotic water flow in toad bladder by prostaglandin E1. Evidence for different compartments of cyclic AMP.

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Abstract

The effect of prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) on osmotic water flow across toad bladder and cyclic AMP content of the mucosal epithelial cells has been determined under basal conditions and in the presence of either theophylline or antidiuretic hormone (ADH); Under basal conditions and with PGE1 concentrations from 10(-8) to 10(-5) M no evidence of stimulation of water flow was observed, and with 10(-7) M PGE1 a significant inhibition was foundmcyclic AMP content under control conditions was 8 pmol/mg protein. It was 9 at 10(-8) M PGE1, 13 at 10(-7) M, 16 at 10(-6) M, and 23 at 10(-5) M. In the presence of theophylline, 10(-8) and 10(-7) M PGE1 inhibited the theophylline-induced water flow as expected. In contrast, 10(-6) and 10(-5) M PGE1 enhanced the rate of water flow. Theophylline increased cyclic AMP content from 8 to 18 pmol/mg protein. PGE1 in the presence of theophylline caused marked increases in cyclic AMP content; The content was 23 at 10(-7) M, 41 at 10(-6) M, and 130 at 10(-5) M; Thus PGE1 stimulates theophylline-induced water flow at cyclic AMP concentrations somewhere between 23 and 41 pmol/mg. Further evidence along these lines was obtained from experiments in which the effects of PGE1 on ADH-induced water flow were studied. Inhibitory effects of PGE1 were not observed at concentrations of PGE1 which raised the level of intracellular cyclic AMP to 30 pmol/mg protein or higher. These results were obtained despite the fact that all four concentrations of PGE1 tested were found capable of inhibiting ADH-induced water flow under appropriate conditions or, in other words, were inhibiting the adenylate cyclase controlling water flow, Thus the increase in cyclic AMP content in response to PGE1 is not derived from this enzyme. Thus the stimulation of water flow by PGE1 in the presence of theophylline is thought to be caused by cyclic AMP spilling over from one compartment to the water flow compartment. No evidence was obtained to directly suggest spillover into the sodium transport compartment. Furthermore evidence is discussed to suggest that most of the cyclic AMP generated in the tissue does not originate from the enzyme controlling sodium transport. As cyclic AMP-stimulated water flow and sodium transport are thought to occur in one cell type, the granular cells, distinct pools of cyclic AMP are thought to be present in one and the same cell type. Thus one pool controls water flow and one controls sodium transport. With high concentrations of PGE1 in the presence of theophylline or high concentrations of ADH, the adenylate cyclase responsible for water flow is inhibited; However, PGE1 can stimulate a tissue adenylate cyclase to sufficiently high levels that cyclic AMP spills over into the "water flow compartment" and thus stimulates water flow.

Authors

J Flores, P A Witkum, B Beckman, G W Sharp

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Total citations by year

Year: 2014 2011 2000 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1973 Total
Citations: 1 1 1 1 3 1 3 2 2 2 3 1 5 1 1 28
Citation information
This citation data is accumulated from CrossRef, which receives citation information from participating publishers, including this journal. Not all publishers participate in CrossRef, so this information is not comprehensive. Additionally, data may not reflect the most current citations to this article, and the data may differ from citation information available from other sources (for example, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus).

Citations to this article (28)

Title and authors Publication Year
Novel therapeutic approaches to autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease
WB LaRiviere, MV Irazabal, VE Torres
Translational Research 2014
Physiological Sensing of Carbon Dioxide/Bicarbonate/pH via Cyclic Nucleotide Signaling
J Buck, LR Levin
Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) 2011
Inhibition of basolateral cAMP permeability in the toad urinary bladder
A Boom, PE Golstein, M Frerotte, JV Sande, R Beauwens
The Journal of Physiology 2000
Comparative effects of prostaglandin E2 and prostaglandin E3 on water flow and cyclic AMP in the urinary bladder of the frog,
CA Herman, RL Shinholser, MD Lujan
Prostaglandins 1985
Interactions of lysyl-bradykinin and antidiuretic hormone in the rabbit cortical collecting tubule
VL Schuster, JP Kokko, HR Jacobson
Journal of Clinical Investigation 1984
Hormones and Neurotransmitters Control Cyclic AMP Metabolism in Choroid Plexus Epithelial Cells
RB Crook, MB Farber, SB Prusiner
Journal of Neurochemistry 1984
Prostaglandin receptors and hormonal actions on water fluxes in cultured canine renal cells (MDCK line)
F Martinez, JL Reyes
The Journal of Physiology 1984
Serotonin-Stimulated Adenylate Cyclase in the Gill of a Freshwater Mussel and Its Relationship to Sodium Transport
JI Scheide, TH Dietz
Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 1983
Renal prostaglandins
JC Frölich, G Fejes-Toth
Klinische Wochenschrift 1982
Cyclic Nucleotides
JW Kebabian, JA Nathanson
1982
Biological Regulation and Development
RF Goldberger, KR Yamamoto
1982
Prostaglandins and water metabolism: A review with emphasis on in vivo studies
PA Gross, RW Schrier, RJ Anderson
Kidney International 1981
Vasopressin-prostaglandin interactions in the regulation of epithelial cell permeability to water
JS Handler
Kidney International 1981
Effect of prostaglandin E1 on water and sodium transport across the toad urinary bladder
T Yoshihiro, F Yoshihiro, Y Shigekazu, M Shigehiro, O Yoshimasa, A Hiroshi
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology 1980
Neurobiology of Cerebrospinal Fluid 1
JH Wood
1980
Effect of cholera toxin and prostaglandins on the rat choroid plexus in vitro
AM Feldman, MH Epstein, SW Brusilow
Brain Research 1979
The Pathophysiology of Diarrhoea
L Turnberg
1979
The role of cyclic AMP in parathyroid hormone action in the toad bladder
BB Sellers, JA Hall, SA Mendoza
The Journal of Membrane Biology 1978
Evidence against a physiological role of camp in choleresis in dogs and rats
RE Poupon, ML Dol, M Dumont, S Erlinger
Biochemical Pharmacology 1978
Transport Across Multi-Membrane Systems
G Giebisch
1978
Ileal mucosal cyclic AMP and Cl secretion: serosal vs. mucosal addition of cholera toxin
HE Sheerin, M Field
American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism 1977
In vitro behavior of human intestinal mucosa. The influence of acetyl choline on ion transport
PE Isaacs, CL Corbett, AK Riley, PC Hawker, LA Turnberg
Journal of Clinical Investigation 1976
Selective inhibition of osmotic water flow by general anesthetics to toad urinary bladder
SD Levine, RD Levine, RE Worthington, RM Hays
Journal of Clinical Investigation 1976
Antidiuretic hormone and water transfer
RM Hays
Kidney International 1976
Prostaglandins: Effects on blood pressure, renal blood flow, sodium and water excretion
RJ Anderson, T Berl, KM McDonald, RW Schrier
Kidney International 1976
Cellular actions of vasopressin in the mammalian kidney
TP Dousa, H Valtin
Kidney International 1976
Mechanisms of glucose stimulated insulin secretion in health and in diabetes: Some re-evaluations and proposals: The Minkowski Award Lecture delivered on September 12, 1974, before the European Association for the Study of Diabetes at Jerusalem, Israel
E Cerasi
Diabetologia 1975
Prostaglandins and the Kidney
JC Mcgiff, HD ITSKOVITZ
Circulation research 1973

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