Author:
Mathieu Y.,Caselli C.,Bernard A.,Carlier H.
Abstract
AbstractThe present study examines the suggestion that in the absence of adequate bile and pancreatic juice, which support the absorption from the gut of long-chain fatty acidsinto lymph, the fatty acids are absorbed directly into the portal blood. Oleic acid (18:l) partitioning between lymph and portal blood was investigated in intact and bile- and pancreatic juice-diverted rats. In a first set of experiments, 18: 1 absorption from the gut into lymph and blood was studied by continuous recovery of the mesenteric lymph for 6 h and mesenteric portal venous blood for 1 h. In a second set of experiments, esterification processes were investigated by study of the mucosal distribution of labelled lipids and by mono- and diacylglycerol acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.22 and EC 2.3.1.20 respectively) specific activities. In the bile- and pancreatic juice-diverted rats the absorption of labelled 18:l into lymph was significantly reduced during the first 3 h of intraluminal infusion of this substrate. In such rats a compensatory absorption of labelled 18: 1 into mesenteric portal blood was not observed. At 6 h after micellar lipid- mixture infusion, the overload of lipids both in free form and as triacylglycerols persisting in the mucosa paralleled the lower acyltransferase specific activities observed in bile- and pancreatic juice-diverted rats. These studies demonstrate the absence of a previously proposed compensatory absorption of 18: 1 into portal blood when absorption into lymph is impaired by an inadequate supply of bile and pancreatic juice.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)