Author:
Flemstrom G.,Garner A.,Nylander O.,Hurst B. C.,Heylings J. R.
Abstract
Duodenal surface epithelial transport of HCO3(-) was measured by direct titration in anesthetized animals. Alkalinization of the lumen occurred in all species, although basal rates varied considerably: rats (approximately 10), cats (approximately 15), pigs (approximately 25), dogs (approximately 25), guinea pigs (approximately 40), and rabbits (approximately 170 mueq.cm-1.h-1). In cats duodenum transported HCO3(-) at a greater basal rate than jejunum (approximately 5 mueq.cm-2.h-1) and developed a higher transmucosal electrical potential difference (PD, lumen negative). Luminal application of 10 mM HCl for 5 min produced a sustained increase in the rate of duodenal HCO3(-) transport that was accompanied by a rise in appearance of E-like prostaglandin immunoreactivity in the lumen and a decrease in DNA release. In cats pretreated with indomethacin (10 mg/kg iv), acid caused only a transient increase in HCO3(-) transport. Exogenous prostaglandin E2 (1-12 microM, luminal) increased basal HCO3(-) transport in cats, rats, and dogs but had no effect on this transport in guinea pigs and rabbits. However, prostaglandin E2 increased HCO3(-) transport and PD in guinea pigs pretreated with inhibitors of tissue cyclooxygenase activity (indomethacin or aspirin) or gastric H+ secretion (cimetidine). Thus the continuous exposure of the duodenum of herbivores to HCl discharged from the stomach may itself stimulate HCO3(-) transport via an increase in endogenous prostaglandin levels and render exogenous prostaglandins ineffective. Secretin (1-15 CU/kg iv) was without effect in both cats and guinea pigs. In guinea pigs, intravenous glucagon (120-360 micrograms.kg-1.h-1) or gastric inhibitory peptide (5 micrograms/kg) both increased HCO3(-) transport but not PD. Hence, prostaglandin-stimulated and hormone-stimulated mechanisms of HCO3(-) transport probably occur in mammalian duodenum as found previously in the isolated amphibian duodenum. The results suggest that epithelial HCO3(-) transport is a major mechanism of acid disposal, and thus mucosal protection, in mammalian duodenum under the control of hormones and endogenous prostaglandins.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology,Physiology
Cited by
173 articles.
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