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J Physiol Vol 193, Issue 3 pp 603-617
Copyright © 1967 by The Physiological Society
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Transport of potassium by the colon of normal and sodium-depleted rats

C. J. Edmonds

1. Ascending and descending segments of colon of normal and Nadepleted rats were perfused with solutions of differing KCl concentration. Net K flux, electrical p.d. and, in some experiments, unidirectional K fluxes were measured.

2. Variation of luminal K concentration over the range 0-40 mM did not affect p.d. or K efflux rate.

3. K secretion rate fell about 30% when Na-free choline chloride solution was perfused.

4. Net flux was a linear function of the luminal K concentration, and fell as the latter increased. Na depletion increased K secretion rate and passive permeability of the mucosa to K. Adrenalectomy had the reverse effect. The luminal K concentration, associated with zero net K flux was much greater than expected if the colonic mucosa behaved passively with respect to K.

5. Unidirectional fluxes determined when 5 mM-KCl was in the lumen showed that the ratio influx/efflux was much less than predicted by Ussing's flux ratio equation.

6. It was concluded that K influx was due to simple diffusion and K efflux to diffusion and active transport, both processes being increased by Na depletion.







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