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Effect of Aldosterone on the Living Cornea in vitro
EARLIER work has shown that the cornea of the rabbit, excised and mounted between two chambers, can be kept alive and functioning for 8 hr. 1 during which time it can be demonstrated that the epithelium generates an electrical potential of 20–50 mV. 1 , that sodium is actively transported across the...
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Published in: | Nature (London) 1961-10, Vol.192 (4797), p.73-74 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | EARLIER work has shown that the cornea of the rabbit, excised and mounted between two chambers, can be kept alive and functioning for 8 hr.
1
during which time it can be demonstrated that the epithelium generates an electrical potential of 20–50 mV.
1
, that sodium is actively transported across the epithelium into the corneal stroma
2
, and that the net flux of sodium is equivalent to virtually all the neutralizing current
2,3
. This system appeared to afford a satisfactory model for the
in vitro
study of the effect on sodium transport of aldosterone, the principal sodium-retaining steroid of the adrenal cortex of most mammals studied
4
. Aldosterone is assumed to affect sodium exchange in the renal tubule
5
, and has been demonstrated
in vitro
to stimulate transport of sodium across the isolated bladder of a toad
6
and skin of a frog
7
. In the present investigation the effect of aldosterone on the excised cornea of the rabbit was assessed
in vitro
. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/192073a0 |