Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY
Description
Abstract Text
Maintenance of cell volume is a homeostatic process expressed in all animal
cells. The necessary water movement across the plasma membrane is coupled
to solute transport mechanisms that are also involved in other cellular
activities such as the accumulation of glucose, pHi regulation or vectorial
fluid transport. The corneal endothelium is endowed with an active ion
pump mechanism responsible for vectorial fluid transport and hence the
maintenance of corneal hydration, a determinant of corneal transparency.
Since this fluid transport and cell volume regulation must be intertwined,
it is imperative to establish the mechanisms of volume maintenance and
regulation to obtain a complete understanding of the fluid transport. In
addition, it is of clinical significance to understand how fluid transport
is affected during times of osmotic stress such as during contact lens wear
and diabetes. The focus of this study is to establish the principles of
volume regulation upon acute and sustained disturbances leading to short
and long term volume regulations, respectively/ Short term volume
regulation will be studied by following changes in cell volume and
intracellular ionic activities to identify the mechanisms and second
messengers involved. Experiments will employ anisosmotic perturbations,
acidosis, hypoxia, ion substitutions and transport-specific inhibitors.
Long term volume regulation will be examined in the context of adaptation
to sustained anisosmotic loads by adjusting the levels of organic osmolytes
(such as amino acids, myo-inositol and sorbitol). Isolated in vitro rabbit
corneas and cultured bovine endothelial cells that are confluent and
polarized on either glass coverslips or permeable supports will be used.
The dynamics of cell volume will be measured using athe sensitive light
scattering technique and by following the concentration of a fluorescent
dye used as a volume marker. The long term goal of this study is to
understand the interaction of the fluid transport, pHi regulation and
volume regulation activities of the corneal endothelium under normal
conditions and during metabolic stress, hyperglycemia and anisosmotic
loads.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
acid base balanceaminoacidanimal tissuebiological signal transductioncell morphologycell osmotic pressurecorneal endotheliumfluorescent dye /probehigh performance liquid chromatographyhyperglycemiahypoxiaintraocular aqueous flowintraocular pressureion transportlaboratory rabbitlight scatteringnuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyphysiologic stressorsecond messengerssorbitolwater flow
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01EY011107-03
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