| Literature DB >> 8349883 |
Abstract
The acclimation of the clawed toad Xenopus laevis to hyperosmotic solutions of NaCl (balanced solution of sea salt), urea or mannitol was studied. The animals could not be acclimated to salt solutions more concentrated than 400 mosm.1-1. Urea was tolerated till 500 mmol.1-1. Plasma osmolality was always hyperosmotic to the environmental solution, but with diminished osmotic gradient at the highest tolerated solutions. Plasma urea concentration approached 90 mmol.1-1, similar in the three solutions of acclimation. Urine volume was very small under all conditions. Serum aldosterone and corticosterone did not differ significantly, although there was a slight tendency towards lower aldosterone in the NaCl solution. In vivo water uptake in tap water acclimated animals was very small, and was higher in the other groups. Only the salt- and urea-acclimated, but not the tap water and mannitol-acclimated groups responded with a clear increase following injection of oxytocin or theophylline. In vitro urea fluxes were similar and invariable in both directions under all conditions. No significant effect of theophylline was observed. Sodium transport measured by the short-circuit technique in vitro was lower in salt- and mannitol-acclimation conditions, and was stimulated significantly under all conditions in response to serosal oxytocin or theophylline. It is concluded that Xenopus laevis can osmoregulate at a limited range of external solutions. It is limited in the increase of its plasma urea concentration; the transport properties of the skin do not change very much upon acclimation, except for the hydroosmotic response to oxytocin.Entities:
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Year: 1993 PMID: 8349883 DOI: 10.1007/bf00261664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comp Physiol B ISSN: 0174-1578 Impact factor: 2.200