Department of Physiology and Neurobiology, University of
Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269; and Mount Desert Island
Biological Laboratory, Salisbury Cove, Maine 04672
 |
INTRODUCTION |
BY MAINTAINING PLASMA
OSMOLALITY (~330 mosmol/kgH2O) below that
of seawater (~1,000 mosmol/kgH2O), marine teleosts
constantly lose water to their surrounding environment. These animals,
therefore, drink seawater to prevent dehydration. Fluid entering the
intestine is isosmotic with plasma due to partial desalination of
ingested fluid by the esophagus and the dilution of stomach contents
with body water (16, 25). Active absorption of
Na+ and Cl
by the intestine drives water
absorption (37). In addition to monovalent ions, divalent
ions abundant in seawater (SO
, Ca2+,
and Mg2+) are absorbed after ingestion. Excess salts
obtained from drinking are excreted by the gill (monovalent ions) and
kidney (divalent ions).
The active absorption of NaCl by the intestinal epithelium is driven by
the basolateral Na+-K+ pump, which creates an
electrochemical gradient that drives electroneutral uptake (lumen to
cell) of Na+, K+, and Cl
by the
loop-diuretic-sensitive
Na+-K+-2Cl
cotransporter
(22). Sodium is pumped across the basolateral membrane via
Na+-K+-ATPase, and Cl
exits via
Cl
channels (4, 11, 12) and an
electroneutral K+-Cl
cotransporter
(11). Subsequently, K+ is pumped back into the
cell via Na+-K+-ATPase and moves across the
apical and basolateral membranes via conductive pathways
(12). K+ movement (cell to lumen) across the
apical membrane and Cl
movement (cell to interstitium)
across the basolateral membrane generates a transepithelial electrical
potential difference (PD) that is serosal negative
(7), and this PD is a direct measure of NaCl absorption
(23). Although the data have provided overwhelming evidence that the marine teleost intestine is involved in NaCl absorption, there have been few studies to indicate that the intestine may function in ion secretion as well (9, 10, 20, 24, 40).
While the mechanism of NaCl absorption is largely known, divalent ion
transport by the marine teleost intestine is not well understood.
Divalent ion levels (SO
, Ca2+, and
Mg2+) throughout the gastrointestinal tracts of both
Southern flounder (Paralichthys lethostigma)
(13) and winter flounder (25) after seawater
ingestion have been measured. SO
(29 mM),
Mg2+ (49 mM), and Ca2+ (12 mM) concentrations
are high in seawater compared with plasma (~1 mM). After ingestion,
fluid entering the stomach is diluted with body water, resulting in
slightly reduced [SO
] and [Mg2+]
with no change in [Ca2+]. In contrast, as fluid travels
from the anterior intestine to the hindgut, both
[SO
] (50-80 mM) and [Mg2+]
(80-160 mM) increase approximately two- to threefold. By assuming that all SO
and Mg2+ are excreted at
the kidneys and rectum, it was determined that 10-15% of ingested
SO
and Mg2+ are absorbed by the
gastrointestinal tract (13, 25). However, the locations
and mechanisms of divalent ion absorption by the gastrointestinal tract
of marine teleosts remain unknown.
The purpose of the present investigation was to determine the
direction, mechanism, and regulation of SO
transport by the winter flounder intestine. Although the intestine is a
site of net SO
absorption (lumen to blood), we have
determined that there exists an active secretory (blood to lumen)
component through which cellular SO
exchanges for
luminal Cl
at the apical membrane. This transepithelial
anion-exchange mechanism is inhibited by sodium cyanide, ouabain,
4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2-2'-disulfonic acid, and satiety
and may play roles in water absorption and in the maintenance of
SO
homeostasis.
 |
METHODS |
Animals.
Winter flounder, Pleuronectes americanus, were obtained by
otter trawl in Frenchman's Bay, ME, or in Long Island Sound, CT. Animals (250-400 g) were held in flowing seawater (17-19°C)
or in living stream units (Toledo) filled with artificial seawater (Utikem) at 12°C. Animal use followed the newest guiding principles for research (2).
Ussing chamber studies.
After dissection, four to six pieces of intestine were removed from an
area ~4 cm below the stomach and washed in ice-cold flounder saline.
After removing the adventitia, tissues, supported by 150-µm nylon
mesh, were mounted in Ussing chambers. Aperture size was 0.332 cm2. Fluid volume was 1.2 ml/hemichamber. The temperature
was maintained at a constant 20°C with water circulated on the
outside surface of the chambers by a Lauda RM6 Electronic water bath.
Fluid inside the chambers was constantly and vigorously stirred with
small magnetic stir bars turned by external stir plates. Unless
indicated otherwise, chambers were insufflated with humidified 99%
O2-1% CO2.
Transepithelial PD was determined with Ag/AgCl electrodes connected to
the mucosal and serosal compartments with 3 M KCl-2% agar bridges.
Electrical properties were determined with a pair of
computer-controlled, high-impedence automatic dual voltage clamps
(DVC 1000; World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL). Electrode
asymmetry was corrected at the beginning and end of each experiment,
and fluid resistance was compensated. Short-circuiting electrodes were
connected to the luminal and serosal solutions with 3 M KCl-2% agar
bridges. Transepithelial resistance (TER) was determined from the
change in PD produced by a brief 10-µA pulse controlled by the
voltage clamps.
Determination of transepithelial
SO
fluxes.
Tissues were continuously short circuited during flux determinations
when identical solutions bathed the serosal and mucosal sides of the
tissue. Tissues were not short circuited under asymmetric conditions.
Unidirectional tracer fluxes were initiated by the addition of
1.0-2.0 µCi 35SO
to the
appropriate hemichamber. Duplicate 50-µl samples were taken from the
unlabeled side at 30-min intervals over a period of 1.5 h and
replaced with equal volumes of unlabeled solution. The specific
activity of the labeled solution was determined at the beginning and
end of each experiment.
Net flux was calculated as the difference between unidirectional
secretory (serosal to mucosal) and absorptive (mucosal to serosal)
fluxes. Four to six tissues (2 control and 2-4 experimental) used
in a given experiment were prepared from the same fish. This is
referred to as one preparation for statistical purposes. To determine
tissue viability, we measured the PD, TER, and short-circuit current
(Isc).
Solutions.
The serosal surface was always bathed with flounder saline (FS)
containing (in mM) 150.0 NaCl, 4.0 KCl, 1.9 CaCl2, 1.0 MgSO4, 0.4 NaH2PO4, 4.2 NaHCO3, 25.0 HEPES, and 5.5 glucose (pH 7.5). The mucosal
surface was bathed with FS, Cl
-free FS,
HCO
-free FS, Cl
- and
HCO
-free FS, or artificial intestinal fluid
containing 10, 25, or 50 mM SO
. In the
Cl
-free FS solution, NaCl, KCl, and CaCl2
were replaced with gluconate salts. In the HCO
-free
solution, NaHCO3 was replaced with Na+
gluconate. As above, gluconate salts were used for substitution in the
Cl
- and HCO
-free FS solution. To limit the production of HCO
from CO2,
HCO
-free FS and Cl
- and
HCO
-free FS and their paired controls were gassed
with 100% O2. The intestinal fluid solutions were
modifications of intestinal fluid contents observed in winter flounder
(25). The 10 mM SO
intestinal fluid
solution contained (in mM) 95 NaCl, 2.0 KCl, 23 CaCl2, 10 MgSO4, 28.3 MgCl2, 4.2 NaHCO3, 25 HEPES, and 5.5 glucose (pH 7.5). The 25 mM SO
intestinal fluid solution contained (in mM) 82.8 NaCl, 2.0 KCl, 24.3 CaCl2, 25.0 MgSO4, 29.2 MgCl2, 4.2 NaHCO3, 25.0 HEPES, and 5.5 glucose (pH 7.5). The 50 mM
SO
intestinal fluid solution contained (in mM) 59.0 NaCl, 2.0 KCl, 25.0 CaCl2, 40 MgSO4, 30.0 MgCl2, 10.0 Na2SO4, 4.2 NaHCO3, 25.0 HEPES, and 5.5 glucose (pH 7.5). The
osmolality of all solutions was that of the FS, 340 mosmol/kgH2O.
Ouabain-linked Sephadex bead preparation.
In preparing brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV), ouabain-linked
Sephadex beads were used to limit basolateral membrane contamination.
Synthesis of ouabain-linked beads was achieved by cross-linking
oxidized ouabain to oxidized Sephadex. The method for Sephadex
oxidation was adopted from Ref. 14. The reaction was
inititated by adding 5 g of Sephadex (QAE A25) and 0.8 g of sodium periodate to 25 ml of 0.1 M sodium acetate adjusted to pH 5.0 with 1 M HCl. The mixture was stirred for 1.5 h at room temperature. The mixture was dialyzed six times with 1 liter of water
(total of 6 liters) over a 1-h period. 1,6-Hexane diamine was added
until 0.5 M, and the pH was adjusted to 9.5 with 2 M HCl. After 1 h of stirring, 0.36 g of sodium borohydride was added and stirred
overnight (~12 h) at room temperature. The oxidized Sephadex was
dialyzed six times with 1 liter of water (total of 6 liters) over a 2-h
period. The oxidized Sephadex was lyophilized and stored at 4°C.
The method for ouabain oxidation was adopted from Ref. 33,
which was modified from Ref. 32. An aqueous
solution of 10 mM ouabain and 11 mM sodium periodate was stirred for
1.5 h at room temperature. The oxidized ouabain mixture was
desalted using Sephadex (QAE A25) and then lyophilized and stored at
20°C.
The method for cross-linking ouabain and Sephadex was adopted from Ref.
21. Oxidized ouabain (1.2 g) and 1.5 g of oxidized Sephadex were dissolved in 75 ml of 100 mM
NaH2PO4 (pH 6.5). Sodium cyanoborohydride (0.75 g) was added, and the mixture was stirred for 24 h at 4°C. This
step was repeated once before the mixture was dialyzed exhaustively
against 10 mM NaH2PO4 (pH 7.4) containing 10 mM
NaN3. The beads were washed three times in mannitol
solution containing (in mM) 50 mannitol, 1 Tris, and 1 HEPES (pH 7.8). The washes were conducted by suspending the beads in mannitol solution
and centrifuging at 2,000 g. Rinsing the Sephadex beads removes all unbound ouabain (36). After the final wash the
ouabain-linked Sephadex beads were diluted 1:3 (wt/vol) in mannitol
solution containing 0.1% NaN3 and stored at 4°C. All
steps using ouabain were conducted under conditions of low light.
Preparation of BBMV.
This method is a modification of Refs. 28 and 36. The
intestine, from ~3 cm below the stomach and 5 cm above the anus, was
removed from four to five flounder and placed in ice-cold FS. The
tissue was rinsed with ice-cold FS, and the mucosa was removed by
scraping with a glass microscope slide. The intestinal scrapings were
placed in a small volume of FS and quickly frozen in liquid nitrogen.
On the day of preparation, 4-5 g of intestinal scrapings were
thawed and diluted 1:30 (wt/vol) with ice-cold mannitol solution that
contained the following protease inhibitors (in µM): 100 4-(2-aminoethyl) benzenesulfonylfluoride HCl, 0.08 aprotinin, 5.0 bestatin, 1.5 E-64, 2.0 leupeptin, and 1.0 pepstatin A. The epithelium
was homogenized in a Polytron (Brinkman) equipped with a PT-20-ST probe
at speed 8 for three 20-s bursts separated by two 1-min rest periods.
The homogenate was diluted 1:2 (vol/vol) with ice-cold mannitol
solution containing the above protease inhibitors. CaCl2
(10 mM) was added, and the homogenate was stirred on ice for 30 min.
The homogenate was centrifuged at 3,000 g for 10 min, and
the pellet was discarded. The supernatant was centrifuged at 39,500 g for 45 min, and the pellet (crude brush-border membrane fraction) was suspended in 150 ml of mannitol solution. The crude brush-border membrane fraction was stirred on ice with ouabain beads
(0.1 ml of packed beads/mg protein) for 1 h followed by 9,000 g centrifugation for 10 min. The pellet was discarded, and the supernatant was homogenized (10 strokes) with a glass teflon homogenizer. Ouabain beads were added (0.1 ml packed beads/mg protein),
and the mixture was stirred for 1 h followed by centrifugation at
9,000 g for 10 min. The pellet was discarded, and the
supernatant was centrifuged at 39,500 g for 45 min. The
pellet (brush-border membranes) was suspended in the appropriate
intravesicular buffer with a syringe fitted with a 23-gauge needle.
BBMV were centrifuged at 39,500 g for 45 min and then
suspended in the appropriate intravesicular buffer using a 23-gauge
needle. The vesicles were stored in liquid nitrogen until the day of
flux measurements.
Methods of enzyme and protein assays have been previously described
(30). Alkaline phosphatase, a marker for the brush-border membrane, was enriched 13.5-fold (±1.7-fold) compared with the original homogenate (n = 6 preparations).
Na+-K+-ATPase and oligomycin-sensitive
Mg2+-ATPase, marker enzymes for basolateral and
mitochondrial membranes, respectively, were enriched 1.9-fold
(±0.56-fold) and 3-fold (±0.85-fold), respectively. Chicken kidney
basolateral membranes, which were enriched sevenfold with
Na+-K+-ATPase, were used to check for ouabain
contamination of flounder foregut BBMV. A 1:2 (vol/vol) dilution of
chicken kidney basolateral membrane vesicles with flounder foregut BBMV
lowered Na+-K+-ATPase activity in the chicken
kidney basolateral membrane vesicles by 12%, indicating low-level
contamination of flounder foregut BBMV with ouabain.
Measurement of vesicle uptake.
35SO
and
D-[3H]glucose uptake were determined by
adding 90 µl of external buffer to 10 µl of vesicles at room
temperature (23°C). Two hundred microliters of external buffer were
used when vesicles were loaded with 25 mM HCO
. Uptake was "stopped" by adding ice-cold stop solution containing (in mM) 300 sucrose, 3 Tris-HEPES (pH 7.8), and 0.1 HgCl2.
Vesicles were collected and washed on Fisher brand 0.45-µm filters as
previously described (28). Transport assays were done in
triplicate on at least three separate membrane preparations.
Compositions of internal and external buffers varied experimentally and
are detailed in the figure legends.
Chemicals.
35SO
(H2SO4, >99% purity) and
D-[3H]glucose were purchased from ICN
Radiochemicals. Amiloride, DIDS, 1,6-hexane diamine, ouabain, Sephadex
QAE A25, sodium borohydride, sodium cyanoborohydride, sodium periodate,
and valinomycin were obtained from Sigma Chemical.
Statistics.
Experimental results are expressed as means ± SE. Paired and
unpaired comparisons of sample means were done using a Student's t-test. Differences were judged significant if
P < 0.05.
 |
RESULTS |
Under short-circuited conditions with identical FS bathing serosal
and mucosal sides, winter flounder intestine actively secreted SO
at a net rate of 8.55 ± 0.96 nmol · cm
2 · h
1
(1.5 h, Fig. 1). Fluxes were initiated at
t = 0 with the addition of
35SO
tracer. SO
secretion had not reached steady state after 1.5 h, indicating that the tracer is slow to equilibrate with intracellular
SO
pools. The absorptive flux was 26% of the
secretory flux at 1.5 h. TER, PD, and Isc
averaged 47.2 ± 2.0
· cm2,
1.82 ± 0.12 mV (mucosal side positive), and
11.6 ± 0.76 µA/cm2, respectively (Table
1).

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Fig. 1.
Plot of unidirectional and net SO
fluxes across winter flounder intestine as a function of time. Tissues
were maintained under short-circuited conditions throughout the
experiment. Unidirectional fluxes include serosal-to-mucosal secretory
flux (S to M) and mucosal-to-serosal absorptive flux (M to S). Net flux
represents the difference between the unidirectional fluxes. Values are
means ± SE of 39 tissues.
|
|
Under physiological conditions, SO
concentration in
the anterior portion of the winter flounder intestine can be >50-fold
higher than plasma. Figure 2 shows the effect of three experimental intestinal solutions containing varying concentrations of SO
(10, 25, and 50 mM). With 10 mM SO
bathing the luminal surface, the
unidirectional absorptive flux increased to 21.3 ± 2.65 nmol · cm
2 · h
1
at 1.5 h (Fig. 2B), which was sixfold higher than its
paired control (Fig. 2A). The large increase in the
unidirectional absorptive flux caused the net flux to reverse in the
direction of absorption (3.36 ± 7.56 nmol · cm
2 · h
1).
Surprisingly, the unidirectional absorptive flux only increased to
21.4 ± 6.0 nmol · cm
2 · h
1
in the presence of 25 mM luminal SO
(1.5 h,
Fig. 2D). However, with 50 mM luminal
SO
, the unidirectional absorptive flux was
71.4 ± 19.3 nmol · cm
2 · h
1
at 1.5 h (Fig. 2F) and 36-fold higher than the control
value (Fig. 2E). Net absorption at a rate of 56.1 ± 16.5 nmol · cm
2 · h
1
(1.5 h) occurred with 50 mM SO
bathing the luminal
surface. The unidirectional secretory flux was not altered (compared
with the paired control) when high levels of SO
bathed the luminal side.

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Fig. 2.
SO transport rate in the presence of luminal
intestinal solutions with varying levels of SO and
their paired controls (1 mM luminal SO ).
A: paired control for 10 mM luminal SO .
B: 10 mM luminal SO . C:
paired control for 25 mM luminal SO . D:
25 mM luminal SO . E: paired control for
50 mM luminal SO . F: 50 mM luminal
SO . Unidirectional fluxes include S-to-M secretory
flux and M-to-S absorptive flux. Net flux represents the difference
between the unidirectional fluxes. Tissues were maintained under
open-circuited conditions throughout the experiment. Values are
presented as means ± SE of 5 preparations. * Significantly
different from paired control (P < 0.05).
|
|
Figure 3 shows the effects of sodium
cyanide (NaCN, 10 mM; Fig. 3A) and ouabain
(10
4 M; Fig. 3B) on the unidirectional
secretory (serosal to mucosal), absorptive (mucosal to serosal), and
net SO
flux across the intestinal epithelium of
winter flounder under short-circuited conditions. NaCN abolished net
flux, whereas ouabain reduced net SO
secretion to
29% of the control value. The effects of NaCN and ouabain appeared to be similar with both treatments inhibiting the unidirectional secretory
flux ~50%, while having no effect on the unidirectional absorptive
flux. Unlike NaCN, ouabain treatment caused a 42% significant increase
in TER (Table 1). NaCN and ouabain treatment both abolished the PD and
Isc.

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Fig. 3.
Effects of 10 mM sodium cyanide (NaCN; A) and
ouabain (10 4 M; B) on transepithelial
secretory (S to M), absorptive (M to S), and net SO
fluxes across winter flounder intestine. Tissues were incubated with
the respective treatment for 0.5 h before beginning the
experiment. Values shown were obtained at t = 1.5 h and are means ± SE (vertical line) of 3 (NaCN) and 6 (ouabain)
preparations. * Significantly different from paired control
(P < 0.05).
|
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When applied to the luminal bath solution, the anion-exchange
inhibitor DIDS (0.2 mM) significantly reduced net
SO
secretion by 46% (Fig.
4). The effect was due to simultaneous small reductions in the unidirectional secretory flux and increases in
unidirectional absorptive flux. In contrast, serosal application of
DIDS had no effect on the unidirectional secretory or net
SO
flux. Similarly, TER, PD, and
Isc were not affected by serosal or luminal DIDS
treatment (Table 1).

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Fig. 4.
Effects of serosal and luminal application of DIDS (0.2 mM) on transepithelial secretory (S to M), absorptive (M to S), and net
SO fluxes across winter flounder intestine. Values
shown were obtained at t = 1.5 h and are
means ± SE (vertical line) of 4 preparations. * Significantly
different from paired control (P < 0.05).
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The luminal DIDS effect prompted a series of anion removal (luminal
bath) studies to probe the mechanism of anion exchange (Fig.
5). Removal of Cl
and
HCO
(Cl
-HCO
) from
the luminal bath solution eliminated net SO
secretion through a 28% reduction in the secretory flux and a 79%
increase in the absorptive flux (Fig. 5A). Net
SO
flux was reduced to 15% of the control value
after luminal Cl
removal (Fig. 5B). The effect
(Cl
removal) was similar to
Cl
-HCO
removal in that the
unidirectional secretory and absorptive fluxes were inhibited and
stimulated, respectively. Removal of HCO
from the
luminal bath solution resulted in a 50% increase in net
SO
secretion caused by an increase in the
unidirectional secretory flux (Fig. 5C). The unidirectional
absorptive flux was not altered by HCO
removal. TER
was not affected by any of the three ion-substitution treatments (data
not shown).

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Fig. 5.
Effects of anion removal on transepithelial secretory (S
to M), absorptive (M to S), and net SO fluxes.
Flounder saline always bathed the serosal side. A: removal
of luminal Cl and HCO
(Cl and HCO free). B:
removal of luminal Cl (Cl free).
C: removal of luminal HCO
(HCO free). Tissues were maintained under
open-circuited conditions throughout the experiment. Values shown were
obtained at t = 1.5 h and are means ± SE
(vertical line) of 6 preparations. * Significantly different from
paired control (P < 0.05).
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Na+-dependent glucose transport is a diagnostic
transport process in intestinal brush-border membranes. For this
reason, we examined Na+-dependent glucose uptake into
flounder foregut BBMV as a quality control measure. Figure
6 shows that imposition of a 100 mM
Na+ gradient (out > in) caused concentrative glucose
uptake into flounder foregut BBMV. Uptake at 1 min was 31% higher than
at equilibrium (60 min). Glucose uptake, in the presence of the same Na+ gradient, was 61% higher than at equilibrium in
vesicles that were short-circuited with 100 mM K+ (out = in) and valinomycin. There was no concentrative glucose uptake in the
absence of a Na+ gradient.

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Fig. 6.
Glucose uptake by flounder foregut brush-border membrane
vesicles in presence or absence of 100 mM Na+ gradient
(out > in). Internal buffer contained (in mM) 100 K+
gluconate, 100 mannitol, 2 Ca2+ gluconate, 3 Mg2+ gluconate, 20 Tris-HEPES (pH 7.8), and 3 NaN3. Vesicles were incubated in the same medium (without
100 mM mannitol) containing 0.l mM glucose and either 100 mM
Na+ gluconate or 200 mM mannitol, and where indicated, 20 µg valinomycin/mg protein. Each point represents mean ± SE of 3 preparations (n = 3). * Significantly different from
no gradient (P < 0.05). Significantly different
from Na+ gradient ( valinomycin, P < 0.05).
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|
Figure 7 shows the effect of
Cl
and HCO
gradients on
SO
uptake into flounder foregut BBMV. Imposition of
a 100 mM Cl
gradient (in > out) caused
concentrative SO
uptake, which was 68% higher at
5 s than equilibrium (Fig. 7A). Short-circuiting the vesicles with 100 mM K+ (in = out) and valinomycin had no effect on Cl
-stimuluated
SO
uptake. There was no stimulation of
SO
uptake in the absence of a Cl
gradient. Imposition of a 23 mM HCO
gradient
(in > out) did not produce concentrative SO
uptake in either open- or short-circuited vesicles (Fig.
7B).

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Fig. 7.
A: SO uptake by flounder
foregut brush-border membrane vesicles in presence or absence of a 100 mM Cl gradient (in > out). Internal buffer
contained either 100 mM KCl or 100 mM K+ gluconate and (in
mM) 100 mannitol, 2 Ca2+ gluconate, 3 Mg2+
gluconate, 20 Tris-HEPES (pH 7.8), and 3 NaN3.
B: SO uptake by brush-border membrane
vesicles in presence or absence of a 23 mM HCO
gradient (in > out). Internal buffer contained either 25 mM
NaHCO3 and 50 mM mannitol or 100 mM mannitol, and (in mM)
100 K+ gluconate, 2 Ca2+ gluconate, 3 Mg2+ gluconate, 20 Tris-HEPES (pH 7.8), and 3 NaN3. Vesicles were incubated in external buffer containing
(in mM) 100 K+ gluconate, 200 mannitol, 2 Ca2+
gluconate, 3 Mg2+ gluconate, 20 Tris-HEPES (pH 7.8), 0.l mM
NaSO4, and, where indicated, 20 µg valinomycin/mg
protein. Each point represents mean ± SE of 3 preparations
(n = 3). * Significantly different from no gradient
(P < 0.05).
|
|
Satiety (i.e., full stomach) abolished net SO
transport by the winter flounder intestine (Fig. 8). The strong effect of feeding on net
SO
transport was due to a 3.9-fold increase in the
unidirectional absorptive flux. Feeding had no effect on the
unidirectional secretory flux. PD and Isc were
five- and threefold lower among fed than unfed fish, respectively
(Table 1). TER was not different among fed and unfed fish.

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Fig. 8.
Effect of satiety on transepithelial secretory (S to M),
absorptive (M to S), and net SO fluxes. Values
shown were obtained at t = 1.5 h and are
means ± SE (vertical line) of 39 unfed and 10 fed tissues.
* Significantly different from control (P < 0.05).
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Transport processes for SO
are exaggerated in
marine teleosts due to the necessity of seawater ingestion.
SO
secretion is accomplished in part by renal
proximal tubule active secretion (29). While the
gastrointestinal tract has been proposed to be a site of
SO
absorption (13, 25), its role in
transporting SO
has not been defined. In this
study, we have examined SO
transport by the winter
flounder intestine to determine its role in absorption. In the absence
of chemical and electrical gradients, however, the intestine of winter
flounder actively secretes (blood to lumen) SO
.
There have been numerous studies to characterize the mechanisms of
active NaCl absorption and the electrical characteristics generated
from this transport (6, 17), and the electrophysiological
parameters (TER, PD, and Isc) obtained for the
control tissues in the present study are consistent with the prior observations.
SO
concentration in the lumen of the anterior
intestine can be >50-fold higher than plasma (13, 25).
For this reason, a series of experiments using modified intestinal
solutions (see METHODS) was conducted to determine the
effects of SO
gradients (10, 25, or 50 mM
SO
) on SO
transport by the
intestine. The dramatic increase in unidirectional absorptive flux with
increasing luminal [SO
] suggests that, under
physiological conditions, the intestine is a site of
SO
absorption. Of interest, however, is the
observation that the increase in SO
absorption is
not linear with increasing luminal [SO
]. This nonlinearity could be explained by a model in which the
movement of SO
from cell to blood across the basolateral membrane occurs on a relatively low-affinity
SO
transporter. The unidirectional secretory flux
was maintained (not different from paired control), even in the
presence of large trans-SO
gradients. The
maintenance of the unidirectional secretory flux with increasing
luminal [SO
] may suggest that intracellular
[SO
] does not change and that the secretory flux
reflects the affinity of SO
for the intracellular
transport site.
Treatment with NaCN abolished net SO
secretion,
indicating metabolic dependence. The effect of NaCN on net flux under
short-circuited conditions was manifested through a reduction in the
unidirectional secretory flux; the unidirectional absorptive flux was
not altered. By inhibiting the unidirectional secretory flux, ouabain
reduced net secretion to 29% of the control value, strongly
implicating the plasma membrane Na+ gradient in
SO
secretion. Transepithelial SO
secretion by the marine teleost renal proximal
tubule is also Na+ gradient dependent, i.e., inhibited by
low-Na+ media and ouabain (29, 30).
Elimination of the Na+ gradient apparently has indirect
effects leading to an inhibition in SO
secretion.
For instance, secondary effects may arise from changes in intracellular
Ca2+ and pH due to changes in
Na+/Ca2+ and Na+/H+
exchange, respectively. In the eel intestine, intracellular pH is
regulated by a basolateral Na+/H+ exchanger,
which is inhibited by amiloride, resulting in intracellular acidification (39). Serosal treatment of the flounder
intestine with amiloride (10
4 M, n = 3),
however, had no effect on the secretory (20.0 ± 4.85 vs.
16.2 ± 11.3; control vs. amiloride), absorptive (
3.21 ± 0.06 vs.
2.47 ± 0.34), or net SO
fluxes (16.8 ± 4.92 vs. 13.8 ± 11.0 nmol · cm
2 · h
1).
Treatment of the intestine from other marine species with ouabain inhibits NaCl absorption and abolishes the PD and
Isc (27). Similarly, in winter
flounder we found that ouabain treatment eliminated the PD and
Isc. In contrast, ouabain treatment increased TER. Ouabain inhibition of Na+-K+-ATPase in the
goldfish (Carassius auratus) intestine increases intracellular Na+ and Cl
, which results in
cell swelling and increased TER (1).
Anion exchangers present in the basolateral (26) and brush
border (31) membranes of marine teleost renal proximal
tubule cells facilitate SO
secretion. This prompted
the investigation of similar mechanisms of SO
secretion in the winter flounder intestine. The anion-exchange inhibitor DIDS reduced net SO
secretion when
applied to the luminal surface only, indicating that anion exchange
possibly facilitates movement of SO
from cell to
lumen. The DIDS effect on net secretion (45% inhibition) was less than
expected. The SO
transport mechanism described here
may be more like that in human ureteral epithelial cells where there
exists both DIDS-sensitive and -insensitive SO
transport (5). In the rabbit renal tubule connecting
segment (segment between distal tubule and collecting duct),
HCO
secretion is facilitated by an apical
Cl
/HCO
exchanger that is also DIDS
insensitive (38). In the present study there was no effect
of DIDS when applied to the serosal surface, and thus if this intestine
contains a basolateral anion exchanger that transports
SO
, it is DIDS insensitive. On the other hand, it
is possible that movement of SO
from blood to cell requires an entirely different mechanism. In the mammalian intestine, SO
absorption is made possible by a
Na+-dependent SO
cotransporter
(19). Whereas the latter has only been localized to the
brush-border membrane in mammals, its presence in the basolateral
membrane is possible and could further explain why
SO
secretion in the winter flounder intestine is
Na+ gradient dependent.
Removal of Cl
and HCO
together
(Cl
-HCO
free) and Cl
alone (Cl
free) from the luminal bath solution almost
completely inhibited net SO
secretion by decreasing
the secretory flux and increasing the absorptive flux. The inhibition of net secretion after luminal Cl
removal alone suggests
that luminal Cl
is required for movement of
SO
from cell to lumen, and hence
SO
secretion. Cl
-dependent
concentrative SO
uptake into foregut BBMV confirmed
the presence of SO
/Cl
exchange at the
brush-border membrane. As mentioned previously, ouabain treatment
increases intracellular Cl
concentration, which would
decrease the driving force for exchange of luminal Cl
for
cellular SO
, and, therefore, helps explain the
decrease in net SO
secretion after ouabain
treatment. The increased unidirectional absorptive flux after removal
of Cl
alone and Cl
and
HCO
together would be expected to occur via the
downhill movement of Cl
from blood to lumen driving the
exchanger in reverse. Luminal HCO
removal
(HCO
free) caused stimulation in net
SO
secretion through an increase in the
unidirectional secretory flux. This observation may suggest that
HCO
competes for a site on the exchanger but is not
effective in facilitating transport. There was no
HCO
-dependent concentrative SO
uptake into BBMV, indicating that HCO
does not
facilitate SO
secretion. More recently,
Cl
/HCO
exchangers facilitating
HCO
secretion have been localized to the apical
membrane of marine teleost intestinal epithelial cells (10,
40). The SO
transporter identified in this
study and HCO
transporter in these other studies are
likely two different transporters; however, their functions could be
interrelated because they both use Cl
to facilitate
transport of their respective counteranions. In this case, the removal
of HCO
from the luminal bath solution would increase
the rate of Cl
/HCO
exchange and
potentially reduce the amount of Cl
used for
SO
/Cl
exchange. This scenario would
result in reduced SO
secretion, which is opposite
to the observed increase. Luminal HCO
removal could
also act indirectly to increase SO
secretion
through changes in intracellular pH. Taken together, these results
suggest that the brush border anion exchanger is most efficient when
exchanging cellular SO
for luminal
Cl
, and HCO
effects are indirect.
Anion exchangers that exhibit high affinity for SO
and Cl
have been identified in several tissues including
lobster (Homarus americanus) hepatopancreas (8)
and mammlian ureter (5), intestine, and cartilage
(34, 35). Similarly, we have identified a transporter in
the brush-border membrane of the winter flounder intestine that
functions best when exchanging SO
(cellular) for
Cl
(luminal). However, the purpose of this transporter
remains uncertain. As mentioned above, SO
secretion by the intestinal epithelium could assist the regulation of plasma SO
. Under physiological conditions (50 mM luminal
SO
), the unidirectional secretory flux was 21% of
the unidirectional absorptive flux at 1.5 h. Therefore, increasing
or decreasing the secretory flux could influence plasma
SO
levels. In addition, if the stoichiometry is
such that two Cl
are absorbed for one
SO
secreted (1SO
:2Cl
), then the transport process
could generate an osmotic driving force for water absorption. In the
rat (26) and Southern flounder (31) kidney,
SO
/HCO
exchange is
electroneutral. Similarly, SO
/Cl
exchange by band 3 in the human erythrocyte is electroneutral (18). However, in the lobster hepatopancreas
Cl
/SO
exchange is electrogenic
(1Cl
:1SO
) (3). Short
circuiting BBMV had no effect on Cl
-stimulated
SO
uptake, indicating that
SO
/Cl
exchange in the flounder
intestinal brush-border membrane is electroneutral. Further work will
be required to determine the stoichiometry of this transport process.
Net SO
transport by the intestine of fed fish was
reduced to zero. Reasons for the effect of feeding on
SO
transport, however, are not entirely clear.
Stomach distension, as occurs during feeding, has been shown to inhibit
drinking in seawater-adapted eel, Anguilla japonica
(15). Feeding, therefore, would reduce the absorption of
excess SO
. Inhibition of SO
secretion during periods of limited drinking would contribute to
regulation of plasma SO
levels. Another possibility
is that SO
transport by the intestinal epithelium
is altered in preparation for nutrient absorption. Both the PD and
Isc were greatly reduced in fed fish, indicating
that the ability to absorb NaCl and water may have been downregulated.
Slightly positive Iscs were observed in winter flounder that had food present in the intestine (24). If
fluid ingestion were reduced during feeding, continued activity by
mechanisms for NaCl and water absorption would be energetically
expensive. The dramatic effect of feeding on SO
transport and electrical properties suggests that hormones are involved
in the regulation of salt and water transport by the marine teleost intestine.
In conclusion, this investigation has demonstrated that the intestine
is a site of SO
absorption in marine teleosts and
has identified active SO
secretion that is
dependent on metabolism and the Na+ gradient.
SO
secretion (cell to lumen) is facilitated by a
DIDS-sensitive anion exchanger at the brush-border membrane. This anion
exchanger facilitates the exchange of luminal Cl
for
cellular SO
, a process that is electroneutral.
SO
secretion by the intestine is strongly inhibited
by satiety. Further work is required to determine whether this
anion-exchange mechanism is important for regulating plasma
SO
and water absorption.
We thank S. Parker for excellent technical assistance and the
biologists of the Dominion Milestone Power Station Environmental Laboratory and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/National Marine Fisheries Service, Milford, CT, who provided animals.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence:
J. L. Renfro, Physiology and Neurobiology, U-4156, Univ. of
Connecticut, 3107 Horsebarn Hill Rd., Storrs, CT 06269-4156 (E-mail:
jlrenfro{at}uconn.edu).
The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article
must therefore be hereby marked
"advertisement"
in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 16 September 2002; accepted in final form 9 October 2002.