With the ferret liquid-filled trachea in vitro, intraluminal methacholine (MCh), phenylephrine (PE) and histamine (Hist) increased smooth muscle tone and salbutamol (Salb) decreased tone. Lysozyme output was increased by intraluminal MCh and PE. Albumin transport into the lumen was not altered by in
The effect of hydrogen peroxide on smooth muscle tone, mucus secretion and epithelial albumin transport of the ferret trachea in vitro
โ Scribed by T. Morikawa; S.E. Webber; J.G. Widdicombe
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 760 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0952-0600
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โฆ Synopsis
The effect of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) was examined on baseline and on methacholine- and phenylephrine-stimulated smooth muscle tone, mucus volume and lysozyme outputs, and epithelial albumin transport of the ferret whole trachea in vitro. H2O2 (10 microM-10 mM) had no significant effect on tracheal smooth muscle tone but produced concentration-dependent increases in mucus volume, lysozyme and albumin outputs. The potential difference (P.D.) across the trachea was not changed by H2O2. Exposure of the trachea to H2O2 (1 mM) for 2 h reduced the smooth muscle contractions and lysozyme outputs due to methacholine (1 microM) and phenylephrine (10 microM). Methacholine-induced albumin output was significantly increased by H2O2 but that due to phenylephrine was not significantly affected. Exposure to H2O2 had no significant effect on the mucus volume output produced by methacholine or phenylephrine. Thus H2O2 directly stimulates submucosal gland secretion, including secretion from serous cells, and epithelial albumin transport across the ferret trachea but has no effect on tracheal smooth muscle tone. H2O2 reduces methacholine- and phenylephrine-induced smooth muscle contractions and serous cell secretion. H2O2 causes hyperresponsiveness of albumin output to methacholine but not to phenylephrine.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
SUMMARY: In the ferret liquid-filled trachea in vivo, intraluminal bradykinin (BK, 3-300 \(\mu\) ) produced concentration-dependent increases in the output of lysozyme from submucosal gland serous cells and albumin movement into the lumen. Baseline outputs of albumin and lysozyme were not altered si