Ion Channel Integration and Functional Coupling in Salivary Gland Fluid Secretion
Tarek Mohamed Abd El-Aziz, Brij B. Singh

TL;DR
This paper explains how ion channels work together in salivary glands to produce saliva through coordinated cellular processes.
Contribution
The paper provides a unified framework of ion channel integration in salivary fluid secretion under physiological conditions.
Findings
Salivary fluid secretion involves two stages: isotonic secretion by acinar cells and ionic modification in ductal epithelium.
Calcium signaling activates chloride channels and potassium channels, which are critical for fluid secretion.
Ion transport pathways in ductal epithelium modify primary saliva to produce hypotonic final saliva.
Abstract
Salivary glands produce saliva through precisely coordinated epithelial ion transport processes. Ion channels are essential components of the molecular machinery that convert neural and hormonal signals into targeted ion and water flux. This review focuses on the integrated molecular and cellular mechanisms by which ion channels cooperate to generate salivary fluid under physiological conditions. Saliva formation proceeds through two sequential stages: isotonic primary fluid secretion by acinar cells, followed by ionic modification within the ductal epithelium. Parasympathetic stimulation activates muscarinic M1/3 receptors, initiating intracellular calcium signaling through inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-dependent release from the endoplasmic reticulum and sustained calcium entry via Orai1/TRPC channels. Elevated cytosolic calcium activates apical ANO1/TMEM16A chloride channels, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIon Transport and Channel Regulation · Ion Channels and Receptors · Biochemical Analysis and Sensing Techniques
