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2001 Volume No 2 -
pages 49-61
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Title: Chloride channels and the reactions of
cells to topography
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Authors: G.Tobasnick and A.S.G.Curtis
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Address: Centre for Cell Engineering, University
of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
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E-mail: A.Curtis at bio.gla.ac.uk
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Key Words: Microtopography, chloride channel, antisense,
contact guidance, tendon cells
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Publication date: 13th December 2001
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Abstract: The reactions of rat epitenon cells to
substratum topography on the micrometric and nanometric scale
such as groove-ridge structures include cell extension, elongation
and orientation reactions. In this paper we report that stretch-sensitive
chloride channels may be involved in the earliest stages of
these reactions in epitenon fibroblast-like cells. We report
that rat epitenon-cells can develop appreciable lateral mechanical
tension that could stretch both the force generating cells
themselves and those nearby. We show that cells in medium
in which more than 80% of the chloride has been replaced by
nitrate show little reaction to topography. Spreading of the
cells takes place but is much reduced along the direction
of the groove-ridge topography but enhanced across the topography.
The chloride channel inhibitors NPPB (5-Nitro-2- (3phenylpropylamino)
benzoicacid) 4,4'-disothiocyanostilbene-2, 2' sulphonic acid
(DIDS) and Chlorotoxin produce similar results which are further
accentuated when these inhibitors are presented in low chloride
medium. An antibody against ClC3, which has close homology
to ClC5/6 also, blocked reaction to topography. These treatments
have no significant effect on cell spreading on planar surfaces
nor do they lead to changes in internal pH in the cells. There
is a slight inhibition of rates of cell movement . Experiments
using antisense oligoribonucleotides to ClC-5 or ClC-6 channel
m-RNA also inhibit topographic reactions, which provides further
confirmation of the hypothesis. Since the ClC-3,4 and 5 share
considerable sequence similarities in the genes and in their
proteins it has not been possible to make an unambigous determination
of which precise chloride channel(s) is (are) involved.
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