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Institut für Zoologie, Universität Innsbruck, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria
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ABSTRACT |
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The pH dependence of acid production and
of acid release has been analyzed in cultured gas gland cells of the
European eel using a cytosensor microphysiometer. Total acid release of
gas gland cells showed an optimum at pH 7.4-7.6, with only a minor reduction at acidic (pH 7.0) as well as at alkaline pH (pH 8.0). The
acid production was largely dependent on the availability of
extracellular glucose and was almost completely abolished if glucose
was replaced by succinate, alanine, or even pyruvate. Phloretin, an
inhibitor of glucose uptake, significantly reduced acid release of gas
gland cells with a
Ki of ~1 × 10
5 M, irrespective
of pH. Although the glucose dependence of acid production was not
modified by pH, acid release became increasingly sodium dependent with
decreasing pH, but at low pH significantly higher sodium concentrations
were necessary to achieve maximal rate of proton secretion. This
sodium-dependent proton secretion could only in part be inhibited by
application of
5-(N-methyl-N-isobutyl)-amiloride. Removal of extracellular potassium caused a slow reduction in the rate
of acid secretion. A similar reduction was observed in the presence of
ouabain, a specific inhibitor of
Na+-K+-adenosinetriphosphatase,
and both effects significantly increased with decreasing pH. The
results demonstrate a significant pH dependence of the mechanisms of
acid release in swim bladder gas gland cells and indicate that
sodium-dependent pathways become especially important at low pH.
cell culture; epithelial cells; Anguilla anguilla
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INTRODUCTION |
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SWIM BLADDER GAS GLAND CELLS typically are exposed to high oxygen tensions; nevertheless, they are specialized for the production of lactic acid in the anaerobic glycolysis and of CO2 in the pentose phosphate shunt, i.e., without concomitant consumption of oxygen (14). Both metabolites are released into the bloodstream, where they provoke a significant decrease in gas-carrying capacity and thus a significant increase in gas partial pressures, which represents a crucial prerequisite for the filling of the swim bladder.
Histological examination of eel gas gland cells revealed small cells of ~10-20 µm, characterized by an extensive basolateral labyrinth (e.g., Refs. 3 and 16). This basolateral labyrinth is especially observed if the cells are in close contact with blood vessels, suggesting an important contribution to the secretion of acid. Although mitochondria are present in eel gas gland cells, they apparently are not concentrated near the labyrinth, as is known from other secretory cells.
We have recently developed a method to take gas gland cells into primary culture (18), and in culture these cells continue to produce lactate. Furthermore, the cultured cells retain high activities of enzymes of the glycolytic pathway and the pentose phosphate shunt. This study also demonstrated that, via adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate as a second messenger, a significant reduction of acid release can be achieved in gas gland cells. It remains to be shown whether this reduction is due to a decrease in the rate of acid production or to a modification of the mechanisms that contribute to acid secretion.
Although membranes typically are not easily penetrated by protons, gas gland cells apparently are equipped with a number of mechanisms that contribute to the secretion of acid, including sodium-dependent pathways, vacuolar-adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase), and the diffusion of CO2, combined with carbonic anhydrase activity (15). Depending on the functional state of the swim bladder, gas gland cells in vivo are exposed to a wide range of pH values. Although in inactive, nonsecreting swim bladders blood pH near gas gland cells may be ~7.4-7.6, during periods of gas deposition the pH may decrease down to pH 6.6-6.8 (7, 22). The present study therefore set out to test the idea that either proton production or proton-secreting pathways may be dependent on extracellular pH. A pH dependence of proton secretion would explain why so many different pathways of acid secretion are established in gas gland cells.
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MATERIAL AND METHODS |
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Specimens of the European eel Anguilla anguilla (body mass 350-500 g) were obtained from a local supplier and kept in a freshwater aquarium at 12-16°C until used for the experiments. The fish were not fed and were kept under natural light conditions. All experiments were performed at room temperature of 20-22°C.
To establish primary cell cultures of gas gland cells, the following chemicals were used: Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium nutrient mixture F-12 (DMEM F-12; cat. no. 21331-020) and fetal calf serum (FCS) obtained from GIBCO BRL [medium 199 (M 199); Eggenstein, Germany] and deoxyribonuclease (DNase), protease, albumin, putrescine, progesterone, epidermal growth factor (EGF), bovine pituitary extract, gentamicin, and kanamycin obtained from Sigma (Deisenhofen, Germany). Elastase was obtained from Serva (Heidelberg, Germany). Insulin-transferrin-sodium-selenite supplement (ITS), collagen type S, and collagenase P were obtained from Boehringer Mannheim (Mannheim, Germany). Additional salts, enzymes, and drugs were obtained from Sigma and Boehringer Mannheim.
Preparation of gas gland cells. The
eels were quickly killed by decerebration and spinal pithing. The
animals were placed into an eel holder, and the gills were irrigated
with well-aerated tap water (20-22°C) at a flow rate of
~1.5-2 l/min (13). Because of the autonomic activity of the
ventricle, this procedure assures the supply of oxygenated blood to the
tissues and prevents hypoxemia. The body wall was opened ventrally, and
the swim bladder was carefully exposed. Occlusive catheters were
inserted into the swim bladder artery (PE-20) and into the swim bladder
vein (PE-50). To remove blood cells from the tissue, the swim bladder
was perfused at a rate of ~0.5 ml/min with saline solution, pH 7.4, consisting of (in mM) 140 NaCl, 5.4 KCl, 1 MgCl2, 10 N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N'-2-ethanesulfonic acid, and 0.5 ethylene glycol-bis(
-aminoethyl
ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid. Disintegration of the swim bladder epithelium was initiated by
infusing saline solution containing elastase (3.9 U/ml),
DNase (70 U/ml), protease (0.3 U/ml), collagenase (0.3 U/ml),
and albumin (0.5 mg/ml). About 5-10 min after infusion of the
enzyme solution, the outer layers of swim bladder tissue were removed
from the swim bladder epithelium. Finally, the epithelium was removed, chopped into small pieces, and incubated in the enzyme solution for 10 min. The solution was filtered through a 70-µm nylon mesh, and cells
and cell clusters were dissolved from the tissue transferred to a
stopping solution of M 199 supplemented with 10% FCS. For the
remaining tissue, the enzyme incubation and the filtration procedure
were repeated twice. Cells in the stopping solution were sedimented by
centrifugation at 600 revolutions/min (100 g) for 10 min (Heraeus Labofuge
400R). The cell pellet was washed twice. After the second wash, cells
were suspended in DMEM supplemented with alanine-glutamine (10 µmol/ml), ITS (5 µg/ml), putrescine (16 µg/ml), progesterone
(6.29 ng/ml), pituitary gland extract (0.5 µg/ml), EGF (0.02 µg/ml), albumin 0.1 mg/ml, gentamicin (10 µg/ml), kanamycin (10 µg/ml), and 0.5% FCS (15).
Measurement of proton secretion. Measurement of proton secretion followed a procedure previously described in detail (15). Gas gland cells were seeded into 12-mm-diameter disposable polycarbonate cell capsules (Molecular Devices, Munich, Germany) at ~100-200 µl of cell suspension per well. These capsule caps were previously coated with collagen I. The collagen was prepared by mixing one part collagen I with three parts ethanol (60%). About 70 µl of this mixture were pipetted onto a capsule cup, and the ethanol was evaporated overnight. Typical estimates of cell density of the suspension seeded into the cell capsules range from 1.00 to 1.25 ± 0.15 × 105 cells, with a protein content of 14.6-17.9 ± 4.4 µg. The cultures were incubated at 20°C in a humidified atmosphere of 0.5% CO2 in air overnight. This preincubation was sufficient to assure attachment of the cells to the membrane of the capsule cups.
The next day, the capsule cups were loaded into a cytosensor microphysiometer (Molecular Devices), in which a light-addressable potentiometric sensor continuously measured the rate at which the cells acidify their environment (10, 12). The measuring chambers of the microphysiometer were intermittently perfused by peristaltic pumps with a medium of low buffer concentration (0.92 mM phosphate) to increase the sensitivity of the system. A typical pumping cycle of 60 s consisted of a flow period of 40 s followed by a flow-off period of 20 s. During flow-off periods, protons released from the gas gland cells accumulated in the measuring chamber, and the rate of proton release was quantified by fitting the sensor data to a straight line with the least-squares procedure, the slope of this line representing the acidification rate. Numerically, a slope of 1 µV/s is close to 0.001 pH/min. At the end of a measuring period, flow was resumed and the next pumping cycle began, washing out the protons that had accumulated in the previous measuring cycle. The pH change produced by the cells during a measuring cycle typically was <0.1 pH units.
Each measuring chamber was constantly supplied by two media (control and test solution), and a change from one to the other was induced by an electromagnetic valve with a lag time between valve switch and fluid arrival at the measuring chamber of ~3 s at a flow rate of 100 µl/min. The basic composition of this medium was (in mM) 138 NaCl, 5.1 KCl, 1.1 CaCl2, 0.93 MgSO4, 0.81 K2HPO4, 0.11 KH2PO4, and 5.0 glucose (pH 7.4; control conditions). For preparation of test solutions, various antagonists were added to the basic medium, with the pH of the solution carefully kept constant. In case dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) or ethanol (EtOH) was necessary to solubilize a specific component, the same concentration of DMSO or EtOH was also added to the control channel. Experimental temperature was 22 ± 1°C. The pumps, valve switching, and data collection were controlled by a personal computer (Macintosh) and a dedicated software package (Molecular Devices).
In the series of experiments testing the importance of extracellular sodium concentration for acid secretion, sodium chloride was replaced by tetramethylammonium chloride (TMA) or by choline chloride. Replacement of extracellular potassium was achieved by using the appropriate sodium salts. Stock solutions of phloretin were prepared in ethanol, and stock solutions of 5-(N-methyl-N-isobutyl)-amiloride (MIA) were prepared in DMSO. Ouabain was prepared in phosphate buffer.
To calculate the amount of protons secreted by the cells, the buffer values of the phosphate buffer were determined by titration with HCl in the pH range used for the measurements (n = 3), and the appropriate buffer values were obtained from this curve. For pH 7.0, 7.4, and 7.8, the titration curves revealed the following buffer values (Ptot): 0.413 mM/pH (pH 7.0), 0.272 mM/pH (pH 7.4), and 0.136 mM/pH (pH 7.8).
Data analysis. The rate of acid release was quantified by fitting the cytosensor data collected during periods of interrupted flow to a straight line with the least-squares procedure. The acidification rate is given in microvolts per second. To eliminate the scatter of the data induced by the variable rate of acidification measured under control conditions, the data were also normalized by setting the rate of acidification recorded during a 4- to 8-min period before the administration of a drug to 100%. Normalized data are presented as percent of basal rate (control rate).
The amount of protons (dH+) actually excreted by the cells in the cytosensor microphysiometer can be calculated from the change in pH observed in a given time period (dpH), the buffer value, and the chamber volume (V) (see Ref. 11): dH+ = Ptot × dpH × V.
This gives the amount of protons secreted by all cells in the measuring chamber. To recalculate to the rate of proton secretion by an individual cell, the total number of cells in the measuring chamber at the time of measurement must be known, which, however, can hardly be determined (15, 18). Cells are seeded the day before the experiment, and the cell concentration of this solution can be determined. It is not known, however, how many cells actually attach to the polycarbonate membrane and what the proliferation rate is. Furthermore, only ~25% of the total area of the polycarbonate membrane will be in the measuring chamber; the rest is cut off when the system is assembled. The measuring chamber is constructed as a sandwich with polycarbonate membranes on both sides of the cells, so that at the end of the experiment it cannot by disassembled without breaking cells, which prevents an accurate cell count at the end of the experiment. Nevertheless, to get at least an idea about the possible rate of proton secretion by gas gland cells, we used the original cell count of the cell suspension added to the capsule cap and the geometry of the chamber to get an estimate of cell density. Given the uncertainty in the determination of the cell number, the results clearly are estimates of the actual rate of cellular proton secretion but nevertheless are helpful in the comparison with other cell types. Data are given as means ± SE; n refers to the number of cell preparations. Statistical differences from control or between treatments were tested by analysis of variance, followed by a multiple-comparison procedure (SigmaStat) or, where applicable, the Student's t-test. Significance of differences was accepted at P < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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Glucose is a well-known substrate for proton secretion of swim bladder gas gland cells, and therefore the rate of acid secretion measured in the presence of 5 mM glucose was used as a control situation. Substrate specificity of proton production in swim bladder gas gland cells was tested by replacing glucose with succinate, alanine, or pyruvate in the extracellular fluid. Any of these replacements of glucose as a substrate resulted in a decrease in the rate of proton secretion by >80% (Fig. 1), and the final rate of proton secretion was hardly different from values obtained simply by removing glucose from the medium (see below). Furthermore, proton secretion could not be enhanced by addition of acetate or pyruvate to the glucose-containing medium; addition of pyruvate rather resulted in a slight decrease in the rate of proton secretion (Fig. 1).
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The influence of extracellular pH on the rate of proton secretion was tested in 16 preparations. The rate of proton secretion was quite stable and at pH 7.4, which was used as a reference value, decreased only by ~20% over the time course of ~4 h (Fig. 2A). The estimate of the rate of proton secretion per individual cell obtained from these values showed a broad optimum curve (Fig. 2B), with high values at pH 7.4-7.6 and slightly reduced rates at lower as well as at higher pH values.
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Figure 3 shows the rate of acid secretion in relation to the extracellular glucose concentration at pH 7.0, 7.4, and 7.8. In this series of experiments, the data were normalized to the rate of acid secretion measured in the presence of 20 mM glucose (control). Compared with this value, the rate of acid secretion decreased by ~90% in the absence of glucose. With increasing glucose concentration, acid secretion rapidly increased and at 1.25 mM glucose already reached ~75% of control, and this effect was almost independent of pH. The Lineweaver-Burk plot revealed a Michaelis constant (Km) of 0.20 mM at pH 7.0 and 0.13 mM at pH 7.4 and 7.8 (Fig. 3).
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Phloretin, an inhibitor of glucose uptake, effectively blocked acid
secretion (Fig. 4), and at a concentration
of 10
4 M phloretin acid
secretion was reduced to ~10-15% of control. Again, this effect
was very similar at pH 7.0, 7.4, and 7.8. Ki values for
phloretin were between 1.0 and 1.4 × 10
5 M, and they were not
significantly different between the different pH values tested.
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The importance of extracellular sodium for acid secretion was tested by
replacing sodium by TMA or choline. Reducing the extracellular sodium
concentration caused an immediate marked decrease in the rate of acid
secretion, and this reduction was significantly modified by
extracellular proton concentration (Fig.
5). Whereas in the absence of sodium acid
secretion was reduced to ~35% of control at pH 7.8, at pH 7.0 it was
reduced to ~15%. The
Km values
calculated from these curves were 7.4 ± 1.2 mM at pH 7.8, 10.6 ± 0.6 mM at pH 7.4, and 32.1 ± 8.1 mM at pH 7.0 and thus showed
a clear pH dependence. The sodium-dependent acid secretion was in part
inhibited by MIA, and this inhibition was also pH dependent. At
10
5 M MIA acid secretion
was reduced by ~20% at pH 7.8, whereas at pH 7.0 a reduction of
~40% was observed (Fig. 6). At
10
4 M MIA the effect was
even more pronounced, but this effect most likely was not specific
anymore. At this high concentration, the difference between the
different pH values was lost, and the effect was no longer reversible.
Amiloride was less effective and reduced the proton secretion only by
~10-20%, even at a concentration of
10
3 M (data not shown).
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In contrast to sodium removal, the removal of extracellular potassium
caused a slow decrease in the rate of proton secretion, finally
leveling off at ~80% of control at pH 7.8 (Fig.
7). This effect markedly increased with
decreasing pH, and at pH 7.0 proton secretion was finally reduced by
~65% compared with control values. Quite similar inhibition values
were obtained after inhibition of
Na+-K+-ATPase
using 10
3 M ouabain; even
the time course of these experiments was quite similar (Fig.
8). Whereas the decrease in proton
secretion seen after removal of potassium rapidly recovered to near
control rates after returning to the potassium-containing medium, the
effect of ouabain was not easily abolished by removal of the inhibitor.
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DISCUSSION |
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The results of the present study demonstrate that extracellular glucose is the by far most important substrate for proton production in swim bladder gas gland cells. Furthermore, with respect to proton production glucose cannot be replaced by other substrates commonly metabolized by other cells. The Km value of 0.2 mM or even lower indicates, however, that plasma glucose levels in the eel (19) are high enough to assure constant glucose supply to the gas gland cells. This confirms previous studies, which demonstrated that inhibition of aerobic metabolism with cyanid has almost no effect on the rate of acid secretion by gas gland cells (15). Thus protons are almost exclusively produced in the glycolytic pathway, and substrates entering energy metabolism at the level of pyruvate or even below cannot be used for proton production.
Our attempt to obtain a quantitative estimate of the rate of proton
secretion revealed that the average rate of proton secretion per cell
probably is ~1-2 × 10
17 mol
H+/s. Owicki and Parce (11)
reported a value of ~1.6 × 10
16 mol/s for mammalian
cells at 37°C, and the rate of proton secretion of rat parietal
cells is ~1 × 10
15
mol/s (5). If we account for the difference in temperature, the rate of
acid secretion of swim bladder gas gland cells appears to be only
slightly lower than values reported for mammalian cells, which
underlines the acid-producing capacity of the cells.
Glycolysis usually is inhibited at low pH, and the rate of acid production in gas gland cells was slightly reduced at pH 7.0. If glycolytic ATP production and ATP consumption remain tightly coupled, the rate of proton production per mole glucose does not change with pH (6), so that the decrease in proton secretion at low pH indicates a decrease in the glycolytic activity. A reduction in glycolytic flux at low pH is a common phenomenon that appears to apply to gas gland cells as well, although they are specialized for the production of acid and at least during periods of gas secretion are exposed to low extracellular pH values down to pH 6.6. Unfortunately, no data are as yet available on the intracellular pH of gas gland cells, but the decrease in the rate of acid secretion observed in our study at low extracellular pH suggests that gas gland cells are no exception in this respect.
Glucose uptake is effectively inhibited by phloretin, which binds to the outer glucose carrier site (8). This inhibitory effect of phloretin was not dependent on pH, and our Ki value with 10-14 µM is well in the range of Ki values reported in the literature. Tiihonen and co-workers found a value of 6 µM in carp erythrocytes (23); 48 µM have been reported for erythrocytes of the common eel (24), and 0.24 µM have been reported for human erythrocytes (8).
Whereas glucose uptake and glycolytic proton production were not or
only to a minor degree dependent on the extracellular pH, the
sodium-dependent proton secretion significantly varied with pH. The
relative contribution of sodium-dependent membrane transport processes
to total acid release apparently increases with decreasing pH, although
sodium affinity decreases, so that higher sodium concentrations are
necessary to achieve the maximal rate of acid secretion.
Na+/H+
exchange and sodium-dependent
Cl
/
exchange represent acid-secretory pathways (1, 2, 4, 21). The
inhibitory effect of MIA clearly demonstrates that
Na+/H+
exchange is involved in acid secretion of gas gland cells, although at
pH 7.0 only a reduction of ~40% was achieved, and at higher pH the
reduction was even less. In fact, while the remaining rate of proton
secretion after sodium removal decreased from 35 to ~15% between pH
7.8 and 7.0, the inhibitory effect of MIA
(10
5 M) increased from
~20 to 40% at the same time. This suggests that the increased sodium
dependence of proton secretion at low pH is mainly due to an increased
contribution of
Na+/H+
exchange to total acid secretion. A pH-dependent modification of the
Na+/H+
exchange activity has been reported for several cells, including fibroblasts (20) or mammalian kidney cells. In proximal tubular cells
of rabbit kidney, the activity of the
Na+/H+ antiporter
at pH 6.5 was almost three times as high as at pH 8.0 (21). The authors
suggest that the increase in activity might be caused by a
pH-dependent activation of inactive
Na+/H+
antiporters.
Whereas, depending on pH, removal of sodium can inhibit 65-85% of
the total acid secretion, inhibition of
Na+/H+
exchange accounts only for ~40% of this sodium-dependent acid secretion. Sodium-dependent
Cl
/
transport appears to be present in gas gland cells (15), but its
contribution to proton secretion is no more than 10-20%, so that
a significant fraction of the sodium-dependent acid release cannot be
explained on the basis of acid transfer through membranes using the
sodium gradient as the driving force. These considerations as well as
the time course of the sodium effect, which is quite similar to the
time course of glucose deprivation, lend further support to the notion
that sodium-dependent glucose uptake is present in gas gland
cells (15).
Sodium-dependent symport and antiport require Na+-K+-ATPase activity to maintain the sodium gradient, and ouabain, a specific inhibitor of Na+-K+-ATPase, also reduced the rate of acid secretion. Na+-K+-ATPase activity is rapidly enhanced following the entry of sodium into the cell. Accordingly, the acidification-induced increase in cytoplasmatic sodium concentration causes a significant stimulation of Na+-K+-ATPase in primary cultures of rat renal proximal tubular cells (9). At pH 7.0, inhibition of Na+-K+-ATPase in gas gland cells finally reduced the rate of acid excretion by ~70%, compared with only 35-40% at pH 7.8, suggesting an increased contribution of sodium-dependent pathways to acid secretion at low pH. As already discussed, the contribution of Na+-H+ exchange to acid secretion indeed increased at low pH.
Inhibition of Na+-K+-ATPase activity not only decreases the sodium and potassium gradients across the cell membrane, but with changing ion gradients it will also induce a change in membrane potential. Removal of extracellular potassium, in turn, causes an immediate hyperpolarization. Nevertheless, in gas gland cells the inhibitory effect of potassium removal and the time course of the inhibition almost exactly mimicked the effect of Na+-K+-ATPase inhibition, whereas sodium removal caused an immediate reduction in acid secretion. This suggests that the sodium gradient is critical for the secretion of protons and that the membrane potential itself is not of primary importance. An alternative explanation for the decrease in acid secretion after removal of potassium would be the contribution of K+/H+ exchange to acid secretion. This explanation is not very likely, however, because omeprazole, a specific inhibitor of K+-H+-ATPase, did not reduce acid secretion in gas gland cells (15).
Our results thus indicate that, at alkaline pH, acid-secreting pathways using sodium-dependent mechanisms are not as important for acid release of gas gland cells as at low pH. Alkaline pH values typically are observed in blood of inactive swim bladders (7), and in this situation blood PCO2 typically is low. Stimulation of acid production results in the formation of lactic acid, but also of CO2 via the pentose phosphate shunt (17, 25). These considerations support the idea that, with initial stimulation of acid production in the energy metabolism of gas gland cells, the diffusion of CO2, including carbonic anhydrase activity in the plasma as well as in the cell membrane (15), might be a dominating pathway for acid secretion. With proceeding acidification and raising of PCO2 values, however, additional ion-transporting pathways become more and more important.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The study was financially supported by the Fonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung (no. P11837-BIO).
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address reprint requests to B. Pelster.
Received 14 May 1997; accepted in final form 8 August 1997.
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