Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences
Published:https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1982.0154

    Potassium chloride is the major salt recycled in most insect excretory systems. Ion and water reabsorption occur in the rectum by active transport of Cl- and largely passive movement of K+. Both these processes are stimulated several fold by a neuropeptide hormone acting via cyclic AMP (cAMP). This Cl- transport process was investigated by using intracellular ion-sensitive microelectrodes, radiotracer flux measurements, voltage clamping, ion substitutions and inhibitors. The mucosal entry step for Cl- is energy-requiring and highly selective, and is stimulated directly by cAMP and luminal K +. Under some experimental conditions, measured electrochemical potentials for cations across the mucosal membrane are too small to drive Cl- entry by NaCl or KC1 cotransport mechanisms; moreover, net 36C1- flux is independent of the apical Na+ potential. Similarly no evidence for a HCO3-Cl- exchange was obtained. We conclude that Cl- transport in locust gut is different from mechanisms currently proposed for vertebrate tissues.

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