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  • Title: Transport of albumin into the intestinal lumen of the rat.
    Author: Kimm MH, Hardin JA, Gall DG.
    Journal: Can J Physiol Pharmacol; 1997 Mar; 75(3):193-8. PubMed ID: 9164701.
    Abstract:
    The intestine is considered a major site for the breakdown and clearance of serum proteins. The mechanism of transport of macromolecules from the serosa into the lumen is unclear. The present study was designed to characterize the serosal to mucosal movement of albumin. Transport of bovine serum albumin (BSA) was assessed in short-circuited Ussing chambers, using stripped rat jejunum devoid of Peyer's patches. To define the kinetics of serosal to mucosal albumin transport the serosal surface was exposed to BSA at varying concentrations (0.5-5 mg.mL-1). Fluids from the mucosal compartment were sampled over time and assayed for immunologically intact BSA by ELISA. All subsequent experiments utilized a concentration of cold BSA (2 mg.mL-1) that produced maximal levels of intact BSA transport. To assess total BSA transport (intact BSA plus degraded BSA), 10 microCi (1 Ci = 37 GBq) 125I-labelled BSA was added to the serosal surface in addition to 2 mg.mL-1 cold BSA. To further characterize BSA transport tissues were treated with sodium fluoride (NaF) (metabolic inhibitor) or colchicine (an inhibitor of microtubule polymerization) or with the nerve blocker tetrodotoxin (TTX). All experiments using inhibitors were performed in paired tissues obtained from the same animal. Transport of intact BSA into the intestinal lumen was a saturable process, with a Vmax of 251 +/- 13 ng.cm-2.h-1 and a Km of 0.72 +/- 0.1 mg.mL-1, and represented 7% of the total BSA flux into the intestinal lumen. In the presence of NaF (2 x 10(-3) M), transport of both intact and total BSA was significantly inhibited (intact: control 374 +/- 80 vs. NaF 46 +/- 11, 88% inhibition; total: control 3288 +/- 296 vs. NaF 2550 +/- 235 ng.cm-2.h-1, 22% inhibition; p < 0.05). In addition, colchicine significantly inhibited intact BSA transport (control 339 +/- 15 vs. colchicine 206 +/- 13 ng.cm-2.h-1, 39% inhibition; p < 0.05). TTX had no effect on intact BSA flux. The findings suggest that transport of intact BSA from the serosa into the intestinal lumen is a saturable, energy-dependent process, which involves microtubules but is not under neural regulation.
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