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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol (September 18, 2008). doi:10.1152/ajpgi.90384.2008
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Submitted on June 17, 2008
Revised on September 11, 2008
Accepted on September 12, 2008

Clcn2 encodes the hyperpolarization-activated chloride channel in the ducts of mouse salivary glands

Victor G Romanenko, Tetsuji Nakamoto1, Marcelo A. Catalán2, Mireya Gonzalez-Begne2, George J. Schwartz3, Yasna Jaramillo4, Francisco V. Sepúlveda, Carlos D. Figueroa, and James E. Melvin2*

1 University of Rochester
2 University of Rochester Medical Center
3 Albert Einstein College of Medicine
4 Universidad Austral de Chile

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: james_melvin{at}urmc.rochester.edu.

Transepithelial Cl- transport in salivary gland ducts is a major component of the ion reabsorption process, the final stage of saliva production. It was previously demonstrated that a Cl- current with the biophysical properties of ClC-2 channels dominates the Cl- conductance of unstimulated granular duct cells in the mouse submandibular gland. This inward rectifying Cl- current is activated by hyperpolarization and elevated intracellular [Cl-]. Here we show that ClC-2 immunolocalized to the basolateral region of acinar and duct cells in mouse salivary glands, while its expression was most robust in granular and striated duct cells. Consistent with this observation, nearly 10-fold larger functional ClC-2-like currents were observed in granular duct cells than the acinar cells obtained from submandibular glands. The loss of inward rectifying Cl- current in cells from Clcn2-/- mice confirmed the molecular identity of the channel responsible for these currents as ClC-2. Nevertheless, both in vivo and ex vivo fluid secretion assays failed to identify significant changes in the ion composition, osmolality, or salivary flow rate of Clcn2-/- mice. Additionally, neither a compensatory increase in Cftr Cl- channel protein expression nor Cftr-like Cl- currents were detected in Clcn2 null mice, nor did it appear that ClC-2 was important for blood-organ barrier function. We conclude that ClC-2 is the inward rectifying Cl- channel in duct cells, but its expression is not apparently required for the ion reabsorption or the barrier function of salivary ductal epithelium.







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