Permeability barriers must exist in transitional epithelium to prevent the free flow of water from underlying blood capillaries through the epithelium into the hypertonic urine, and such a barrier has now been demonstrated in isolated bladders. This barrier is passive in function and can be destroyed by damaging the luminal surface of the transitional epithelium with sodium hydroxide and 8 M urea solutions, by digesting it with trypsin, lecithinase C, and lecithinase D, or by treating it with lipid solvents such as Triton x 100 and saponin. From this it is concluded that the barrier depends on the integrity of lipoprotein cell membranes. The barrier function is also destroyed by sodium thioglycollate solutions, and electron microscope investigations show that sodium thioglycollate damages the thick asymmetric membrane which limits the luminal face of the superficial squamous cell. Cytochemical staining shows the epithelium to contain disulfide and thiol groups and to have a concentration of these groups at the luminal margin of the superficial cells. It thus appears that the permeability barrier also depends on the presence of disulfide bridges in the epithelium, and it is presumed that these links are located in keratin. Because of the effect of thioglycollates, both on the barrier function and on the morphology of the membrane, it is suggested that keratin may be incorporated in the thick barrier membrane. It is proposed that the cells lining the urinary bladder and ureters should be regarded as a keratinizing epitheluim.
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1 January 1966
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January 01 1966
THE PERMEABILITY OF RAT TRANSITIONAL EPITHELIUM : Keratinization and the Barrier to Water
R. M. Hicks
R. M. Hicks
From the Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, the Middlesex Hospital Medical School, London, England
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R. M. Hicks
From the Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, the Middlesex Hospital Medical School, London, England
Received:
July 08 1965
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
1966
J Cell Biol (1966) 28 (1): 21–31.
Article history
Received:
July 08 1965
Citation
R. M. Hicks; THE PERMEABILITY OF RAT TRANSITIONAL EPITHELIUM : Keratinization and the Barrier to Water . J Cell Biol 1 January 1966; 28 (1): 21–31. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.28.1.21
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