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XB-ART-8587
J Comp Physiol B 2001 Jun 01;1715:377-86. doi: 10.1007/s003600100186.
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Inhibitory non-genomic effects of progesterone on Na+ absorption in epithelial cells from Xenopus kidney (A6).

Fronius M , Rehn M , Eckstein-Ludwig U , Clauss W .


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The effect of the steroid hormone progesterone on transepithelial sodium transport was measured in confluent monolayers of the A6-cell line from Xenopus kidney. Apical permeabilization with Amphotericin B enabled us to measure the Na+/K+-pump current, and current-fluctuation analysis was used to analyze changes in apical channel density and gating characteristics. Basolateral progesterone (22.2 microM) had a rapid inhibitory effect on the Na+/K+-pump current, and a corresponding decrease in Na+ channel density. The effect occurred within some minutes and took about 50 min to reach a new steady state, in which 45% of the macroscopic current (ISC) was inhibited. Progesterone also inhibits the hypo-osmotic stimulation of Na+ channels which occurs in untreated monolayers. Compared with the known effects of adrenal steroids, our results show a rapid inhibitory action of a steroid hormone on Na+ absorption. The time profile of the progesterone effect suggests, at least in the first minutes, a non-genomic action of progesterone.

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???displayArticle.link??? J Comp Physiol B