Author:
Chacin J.,Martinez G.,Severin E.
Abstract
The role of beta-oxidation in the mechanism of stimulation of acid secretion was examined in toad gastric mucosa in vitro. The incubation with 4-pentenoate selectively inhibited in a dose-dependent manner the rate of 14CO2 formation from [1-14C]octanoate. Pretreatment with 20 mM 4-pentenoate sharply reduced the respiratory and secretory responses to theophylline and histamine. Tracer studies showed a major utilization of exogenous octanoate over glucose and pyruvate by the in vitro toad gastric mucosa. Theophylline and histamine stimulated by 69% the rate of octanoate oxidation. Over 60% of the increments in oxygen uptake produced by theophylline and histamine accounted for the increments in octanoate oxidation, whereas glucose and pyruvate together accounted for less than 25%. Octanoate-dependent respiration was shown to correlate with octanoate oxidation under both inhibition with 4-pentenoate and stimulation with theophylline. Theophylline stimulated by 25% the rate of octanoate oxidation in Cl--free glucuronate-nutrient solutions. The present work provides further evidence for the primary role of fatty acid oxidation in the mechanism of acid secretion in amphibian.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology,Physiology
Cited by
10 articles.
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