Electrical coupling and uncoupling of exocrine acinar cells.
Open Access
- 1 November 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 79 (2), 533-545
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.79.2.533
Abstract
The electrical communication network in the mouse pancreatic acinar tissue has been investigated using simultaneous intracellular recording with two separate microelectrodes and direct microscopical control of the localizations of the microelectrode tips. All cells within one acinus were electrically coupled, and the coupling coefficient (the electrotonic potential change in a cell neighboring to the cell into which current is injected [V2] divided by the electrotonic potential change in the cell of current injection [V1]) between two cells near each other (less than 50 micron) was always close to 1. Cells farther apart (50-100 micron) were, in some cases, coupled; in other cases, there was no coupling at all. Coupling coefficients varied between 0 and 1. There was rarely electrical coupling over distances of more than 110 micron. Using microiontophoretic acetylcholine (ACh) application, it was possible to evoke almost complete electrical uncoupling of two previously coupled pancreatic or lacrimal acinar cells from different acini or within one acinus. The effects were fully and quickly reversible. While the ACh-evoked uncoupling in the pancreas was associated with membrane depolarization, ACh caused hyperpolarization in the lacrimal acinar cells. The uncoupling was associated with a very marked reduction in electrical time constant, indicating a reduction in input capacitance (effective surface cell membrane area). The concentrations of stimulants needed to evoke reduction in pancreatic cell-to-cell coupling were 1 micron for ACh, 0.14 nM for caerulein, and 3 nM for bombesin. These concentrations are smaller than those required to evoke maximal enzyme secretion.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantitative analysis of low-resistance junctions between cultured cells and correlation with gap-junctional areas.The Journal of cell biology, 1978
- Membrane potential, resistance, and intercellular communication in the lacrimal gland: effects of acetylcholine and adrenaline.The Journal of Physiology, 1978
- Calcium ion produces graded changes in permeability of membrane channels in cell junctionNature, 1977
- Size Limit of Molecules Permeating the Junctional Membrane ChannelsScience, 1977
- Secretion of fluid and amylase in the perfused rat pancreas.The Journal of Physiology, 1977
- Permeability of junctions between animal cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1977
- Na+ transport by rabbit urinary bladder, a tight epitheliumThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1976
- Conductance changes associated with the secretory potential in the cockroach salivary glandThe Journal of Physiology, 1974
- Pancreatic acinar cells: acetylcholine‐induced membrane depolarization, calcium efflux and amylase releaseThe Journal of Physiology, 1973
- A FINE STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS OF INTERCELLULAR JUNCTIONS IN THE MOUSE LIVERThe Journal of cell biology, 1970