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Title: [Various effects of prostaglandin E2 on reabsorption of water and urea in the amphibia osmosis-regulating epithelium]. Author: Parnova RG, Bakhteeva VT, Lavrova EA. Journal: Ross Fiziol Zh Im I M Sechenova; 2001 Dec; 87(12):1662-72. PubMed ID: 11840970. Abstract: Principal similarities between molecular pathways providing the enhancement of water and urea reabsorption under the action of argininvasotocin (AVT) in amphibian urinary bladder suggest that prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) could be a negative regulator of urea transport. To analyse this hypothesis, the role of PGE2 in regulation of urea transport was studied in isolated frog (Rana temporaria L.) urinary bladder. The urea permeability (Pu) was determined from the rate of efflux of (14) Curea from mucosal to serosal solution in isoosmotic conditions. The water permeability was measured in separate experiments in presence of an osmotic gradient. In contrast to water permeability, we were unable to demonstrate any inhibitory effect of 10-1000 nM PGE2 on AVT-stimulated urea transport using a variety of protocols. It was found that basolateral PGE2 exposure (10 nM-1 microM) caused an increase in Pu with no effect on osmotic water flow. The PGE2 effect was markedly inhibited by phloretin, a specific inhibitor of urea transporter. Sulprostone, an EP1/EP3 prostaglandin E2 receptor agonist, had no effect on Pu suggesting the contribution of EP2/EP4 receptor subtypes. In presence of osmotic water flow, the AVT-induced urea transport was significantly higher. This water flow-dependent urea permeability was inhibited by PGE2 although the inhibitory effect was less pronounced in comparison to the action of PGE2 on osmotic water flow. On the basis of these results we can make a conclusion that PGE2 has different role in regulation of water and urea transport in the frog urinary bladder. PGE2 could be considered as a stimulator of urea transport and an inhibitor of osmotic water flow activated by the AVT. The ability of PGE2 to regulate various types of cAMP-dependent transport by different mechanisms seems to be based on the presence of multiple basolateral PGE2 receptor subtypes in amphibian osmosis-regulatory epithelium.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]