May 1990
Volume 31, Issue 5
Free
Articles  |   May 1990
Corneal endothelial junctions and the effect of ouabain.
Author Affiliations
  • M A Watsky
    Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota.
  • M D McCartney
    Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota.
  • B J McLaughlin
    Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota.
  • H F Edelhauser
    Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science May 1990, Vol.31, 933-941. doi:
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      M A Watsky, M D McCartney, B J McLaughlin, H F Edelhauser; Corneal endothelial junctions and the effect of ouabain.. Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 1990;31(5):933-941.

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Abstract

Paired rabbit corneas were perfused in vitro for endothelial permeability (Pac) determination with glutathione bicarbonate Ringer's solution (GBR) and GBR plus ouabain (10(-4) M). Results indicated no difference in Pac between the two groups (3.39 vs 3.67, respectively) despite significantly greater stromal swelling in the group perfused with ouabain. Freeze-fracture microscopy of similarly perfused corneas revealed intact tight junctional complexes in both groups, although the tight junctional complex of perfused corneas appeared less organized than that of freshly enucleated, nonperfused controls. Gap junctions were abundant as observed in freeze-fracture replicas of GBR-perfused endothelium, and appeared to be decreased or absent in ouabain-perfused endothelium. These results indicate that corneal endothelial tight junctions are unaffected by perfusion with ouabain, whereas gap junctions appear to be lost. The permeability and freeze-fracture data reaffirms the importance of tight junctions as permeability barriers and indicates that gap junctions are not of primary importance for maintenance or control of the corneal endothelial barrier.

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