Author:
Hajjar JJ,Khuri RN,Bikhazi AB
Abstract
The effect of bile salts on alanine absorption across four regional sites of rabbit intestine was examined using an in vivo single-pass perfusion technique. Na-deoxycholate at a concentration of 3 mM reduced alanine absorption across all levels of the intestine, and a higher concentration (10 mM) of Na-taurodeoxycholate (TDC) caused only a minimal reduction of alanine absorption in the jejunum. TDC, however, was more effective in in vitro experiments, causing an incrase in transmural serosal-to-mucosal flux of alanine and phenylalanine, particularly when present in both the mucosal and serosal media. It also reduced the mucosal-to-serosal alanine flux rate when present only in the mucosal medium. The influx of these amino acids across the mucosal brush border membrane was also decreased by TDC. These amino acid transport changes correlated fairly well with some observed histological changes of the intestinal epithelium. This suggests that bile salt inhibition of amino acid absorption is nonspecific in type and can be mainly explained as being the result of an injurious action of these surface-active agents on the rabbit intestine.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
26 articles.
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