These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Placental transfer of phosphate in anaesthetized rats.
    Author: Stulc J, Stulcová B.
    Journal: Placenta; 1996 Sep; 17(7):487-93. PubMed ID: 8899878.
    Abstract:
    Mechanisms of transfer of inorganic phosphate, Pi, across the placenta of rats at 21 days of gestation were studied using 32Pi. In one group of experiments the unidirectional transfer of Pi from mother to fetus was estimated from radioactivity in the fetus at various intervals after the tracer injection into the mother. At 15 min after tracer injection, the transfer rate was only slightly higher than the estimated rate of fetal accretion of Pi, and it decreased rapidly with the length of the experiment suggesting deterioration of the transfer mechanism under conditions of an acute experiment. In other experiments, transfer of 32Pi and 51Cr-EDTA (a marker of paracellular transfer) were measured across the dually-perfused placenta in the maternal-fetal direction. The transfer rate of 32Pi was an order of magnitude higher than the transfer of 51Cr-EDTA indicating that most of the Pi transfer is transcellular. The transfer of 32P decreased when the concentration of Na+ in the maternal perfusate was reduced, it was related inversely to the concentration of Pi on the fetal side of the placenta, and it was related directly to the concentration of Ca2+ on the fetal side. The maternal-fetal transfer of Pi exhibited saturation kinetics with a K(m) of about 0.4 mM suggesting that at a physiological concentration of Pi in maternal plasma the transfer mechanism is nearly saturated. The present observations are consistent with Pi being transferred in contransport with Na+. The maternal-fetal transport of Pi appears to be stabilized by the high affinity of the transport system to Pi, and controlled by a negative feedback between fetal concentration of Pi and the Pi transfer rate. It may also be controlled, to some degree, by the fetal plasma Ca2+.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]