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Am J Physiol 228: 441-447, 1975;
0002-9513/75 $5.00
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American Journal of Physiology, Vol 228, Issue 2, 441-447
Copyright © 1975 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Branchial effects of epinephrine in the seawater-adapted mullet. II. Na+ and Cl- extrusion

P Pic, N Mayer-Gostan, and J Maetz

Injection of epinephrine into Mugil capito adapted to seawater is followed by a 40-60% inhibition of the Na and Cl effluxes. Simultaneously the Na influx is decreased by 30%, the overall result being a reduction of the net sodium extrusion rate by the gill. The change in Na influx is in part explained by a 75-80% decrease of the oral ingestion of seawater. This branchial adrenergic response is sensitive to alpha-blockade by phentolamine and tolazoline and insensitive to beta-blockade by propranolol. Both alpha-blockers are ineffective when injected alone. Propranolol injected alone mimics epinephrine while simultaneous injection of phentolamine blocks the response to propranolol. Rapid transfer experiments suggest that epinephrine inhibits the branchial Cl pump and its associated Na/K exchange mechanism. The leak pathway for these ions remains insensitive to epinephrine.





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Copyright © 1975 by the American Physiological Society.