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Title: Pancreatic ductal bicarbonate secretion: past, present and future. Author: Ishiguro H, Naruse S, San Román JI, Case M, Steward MC. Journal: JOP; 2001 Jul; 2(4 Suppl):192-7. PubMed ID: 11875258. Abstract: The pancreatic duct epithelium in the guinea-pig and many other species secretes HCO(3)(-) at concentrations approaching 150 mM. This cannot be explained by conventional models based upon HCO(3)(-) secretion via an anion exchanger at the luminal membrane because: 1) under these conditions, the Cl(-) and HCO(3)(-) concentration gradients would favour HCO(3)(-) reabsorption rather than secretion, and 2) the luminal anion exchanger appears to be inhibited by luminal HCO(3)(-) concentrations of 125 mM or more. There may, however, be a sufficiently large electrochemical gradient to drive HCO(3)(-) secretion across the luminal membrane via an anion conductance. In contrast to earlier studies on rat ducts, the membrane potential E(m) in guinea-pig duct cells does not depolarise appreciably upon stimulation with secretagogues but remains constant at about -60 mV. Consequently, even with 125 mM or more HCO(3)(-) in the lumen and an estimated 20 mM in the cytoplasm, the electrochemical gradient for HCO(3)(-) will still favour secretion to the lumen. Under the same conditions, the intracellular Cl(-) concentration drops to very low levels (approximately 7 mM) presumably because, although Cl(-) may leave freely through the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) channels in the luminal membrane, there is no major pathway for Cl(-) uptake across the basolateral membrane. Consequently a HCO(3)(-)-rich secretion may arise as a result of the lack of competition from intracellular Cl(-) for efflux via the anion conductances at the luminal membrane. Whether CFTR, or another anion conductance, provides such a pathway for HCO(3)(-) remains to be seen.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]