Glucose stimulates calcium-activated chloride secretion in small intestinal cells

Author:

Yin Liangjie1,Vijaygopal Pooja1,MacGregor Gordon G.2,Menon Rejeesh1,Ranganathan Perungavur1,Prabhakaran Sreekala3,Zhang Lurong1,Zhang Mei1,Binder Henry J.4,Okunieff Paul1,Vidyasagar Sadasivan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Florida Shands Cancer Center, Cancer and Genetics Research Complex, Gainesville, Florida;

2. Department of Biological Sciences, Shelby Center for Science and Technology, University of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, Alabama;

3. Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Pulmonary Division, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida; and

4. Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Digestive Diseases, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut

Abstract

The sodium-coupled glucose transporter-1 (SGLT1)-based oral rehydration solution (ORS) used in the management of acute diarrhea does not substantially reduce stool output, despite the fact that glucose stimulates the absorption of sodium and water. To explain this phenomenon, we investigated the possibility that glucose might also stimulate anion secretion. Transepithelial electrical measurements and isotope flux measurements in Ussing chambers were used to study the effect of glucose on active chloride and fluid secretion in mouse small intestinal cells and human Caco-2 cells. Confocal fluorescence laser microscopy and immunohistochemistry measured intracellular changes in calcium, sodium-glucose linked transporter, and calcium-activated chloride channel (anoctamin 1) expression. In addition to enhancing active sodium absorption, glucose increased intracellular calcium and stimulated electrogenic chloride secretion. Calcium imaging studies showed increased intracellular calcium when intestinal cells were exposed to glucose. Niflumic acid, but not glibenclamide, inhibited glucose-stimulated chloride secretion in mouse small intestines and in Caco-2 cells. Glucose-stimulated chloride secretion was not seen in ileal tissues incubated with the intracellular calcium chelater BAPTA-AM and the sodium-potassium-2 chloride cotransporter 1 (NKCC1) blocker bumetanide. These observations establish that glucose not only stimulates active Na absorption, a well-established phenomenon, but also induces a Ca-activated chloride secretion. This may explain the failure of glucose-based ORS to markedly reduce stool output in acute diarrhea. These results have immediate potential to improve the treatment outcomes for acute and/or chronic diarrheal diseases by replacing glucose with compounds that do not stimulate chloride secretion.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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