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Relation of mitochondria‐rich chloride cells to active chloride transport in the skin of a marine teleost

90

Citations

23

References

1980

Year

Abstract

Mitochondria-rich cells in the skin of the marine teleost, Gillichthys mirabilis, were found to be ultrastructurally similar to typical chloride-secreting cells of marine fish gill, but had a tall, spindlelike shape due to the thickness of the stratified epithelium. The fluorophore, dimethylaminostyrylethyl-pyridiniumiodide (DASPEI), was used to visualize and count skin chloride cells so that cell density could be regressed against the in vitro short-circuit current (ISC) measured on the same tissue. The regression (r2 = 0.76; n = 72) demonstrated that chloride cells are responsible for anion transport across Grillichthys skin.

References

YearCitations

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