Distribution of ClC-2 chloride channel in rat and human epithelial tissues

J Lipecka, M Bali, A Thomas, P Fanen… - … of Physiology-Cell …, 2002 - journals.physiology.org
J Lipecka, M Bali, A Thomas, P Fanen, A Edelman, J Fritsch
American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology, 2002journals.physiology.org
The ubiquitous ClC-2 Cl− channel is thought to contribute to epithelial Cl− secretion, but the
distribution of the ClC-2 protein in human epithelia has not been investigated. We have
studied the distribution of ClC-2 in adult human and rat intestine and airways by
immunoblotting and confocal microscopy. In the rat, ClC-2 was present in the lateral
membranes of villus enterocytes and was predominant at the basolateral membranes of
luminal colon enterocytes. The expression pattern of ClC-2 in the human intestine differed …
The ubiquitous ClC-2 Clchannel is thought to contribute to epithelial Clsecretion, but the distribution of the ClC-2 protein in human epithelia has not been investigated. We have studied the distribution of ClC-2 in adult human and rat intestine and airways by immunoblotting and confocal microscopy. In the rat, ClC-2 was present in the lateral membranes of villus enterocytes and was predominant at the basolateral membranes of luminal colon enterocytes. The expression pattern of ClC-2 in the human intestine differed significantly, because ClC-2 was mainly detected in a supranuclear compartment of colon cells. We found significant expression of ClC-2 at the apex of ciliated cells in both rat and human airways. These results show that the distribution of ClC-2 in airways is consistent with participation of ClC-2 channels in Cl secretion and indicate that extrapolation of results from studies of ClC-2 function in rat intestine to human intestine is not straightforward.
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