4.7 Article

Ion transport across CF and normal murine olfactory and ciliated epithelium

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 296, Issue 6, Pages C1301-C1309

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00578.2008

Keywords

chloride transport; nasal potential difference; sodium transport; cystic fibrosis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [PPG HL-34322, MTCC NIH P30 DK-065988, NIH HL-70199]
  2. Cystic Fibrosis Foundation [Ostrow04GO]

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Grubb BR, Rogers TD, Boucher RC, Ostrowski LE. Ion transport across CF and normal murine olfactory and ciliated epithelium. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 296: C1301-C1309, 2009. First published March 25, 2009; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00578.2008. -The nasal epithelium of the cystic fibrosis (CF) mouse has been used extensively in CF research because it exhibits ion transport defects similar to those of human CF airways. This tissue is composed of similar to 50% olfactory (OE) and similar to 50% ciliated epithelium (CE), and on the basis of previous observations, we hypothesized that a significant fraction of the bioelectric signals from murine nasal tissue may arise from OE rather than CE, while CE is the target tissue for CF gene therapy. We compared the bioelectric properties of isolated OE from the nasal cavity and CE from the nasopharynx in Ussing chamber studies. Hyperabsorption of Na+ [amiloride response; CF vs. wild type (WT)] was similar to 7.5-fold greater in the OE compared with the CE. The forskolin response in native tissues did not reliably distinguish genotypes, likely due to a cyclic nucleotide-gated cation conductance in OE and a calcium-mediated Cl- conductance in CE. By potential difference assay, hyperabsorption of Na+ (CF vs. WT) and the difference in response to apical 0 Cl- buffer (CF vs. WT) were similar to 2-fold greater in the nasal cavity compared with the nasopharynx. Our studies demonstrate that in the CF mouse, both the hyperabsorption of Na+ and the Cl- transport defect are of larger magnitude in the OE than in the CE. Thus, while the murine CF nasal epithelium is a valuable model for CF studies, the bioelectrics are likely dominated by the signals from the OE, and assays of the nasopharynx may be more specific for studying the ciliated epithelium.

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