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Division of Basic Biomedical Sciences, School of Medicine, The University of South Dakota, Vermillion, South Dakota 57069-2390
This in vitro study tested
the hypothesis that muscularis mucosae contractile activity contributes
to rabbit colonic mucosal function by mechanisms other than simple
mechanical deformation of the epithelium. Experiments were performed by
using a technique that allows simultaneous recording of muscle activity
and transmucosal potential difference, a measure of epithelial ion
transport. ATP, bradykinin, histamine, PGE2,
PGF1
, and PGF2
elicited muscularis
mucosae contractions that were resistant to atropine and TTX. Only
ATP-induced contractions were indomethacin sensitive, and only those to
dimethylphenylpiperazinium iodide (DMPP) were reduced by atropine. All
agonist-evoked increases in transmucosal potential difference were
atropine resistant, and, with the exception of those to
PGE2, PGF2
, and VIP, they were also TTX
sensitive. Mucosal responses to ATP, bradykinin, and histamine were
indomethacin sensitive, whereas those to DMPP, the prostaglandins, and
VIP were not. When cyclooxygenase activity or the mucosal innervation was compromised, even maximal muscularis mucosae contractions did not
produce large secretory responses. It is concluded that contraction-related prostaglandin synthesis and noncholinergic secretomotor neuron stimulation represent the physiological
transduction mechanism through which muscularis mucosae motor activity
is translated into mucosal secretion.
motility; mucosa; submucosal plexus; transduction pathway; integrated function; rabbit
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