info:eu-repo/semantics/article
L-glucose absorption in house sparrows (Passer domesticus) is nonmediated
Fecha
2003-12-16Registro en:
Chang, Ming Huei; Chediack, Juan Gabriel; Caviedes Vidal, Enrique Juan Raul; Karasov, W. H.; L-glucose absorption in house sparrows (Passer domesticus) is nonmediated; Springer Heidelberg; Journal of Comparative Physiology B: Biochemical, Systems and Environmental Physiology; 174; 2; 16-12-2003; 181-188
0174-1578
1432-136X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Chang, Ming Huei
Chediack, Juan Gabriel
Caviedes Vidal, Enrique Juan Raul
Karasov, W. H.
Resumen
We previously demonstrated in intact house sparrows substantial absorption in vivo of L-glucose, the stereoisomer of D-glucose that is assumed not to interact with the intestine’s D-glucose transporter. Results of some studies challenge this assumption for other species. Therefore, we tested it in vitro and in vivo, based on the principle that if absorption of a compound (L-glucose) is mediated, then absorption of its tracer will be competitively inhibited by high concentrations of either the compound itself or other compounds (e.g., D-glucose) whose absorption is mediated by the same mechanism. An alternative hypothesis that L-glucose absorption is primarily paracellular predicts that its absorption in vivo will be increased (not decreased) in the presence of D-glucose, because the permeability of this pathway is supposedly enhanced when Na+-coupled glucose absorption occurs. First, using intact tissue in vitro, we found that uptake of tracer-radiolabeled L-glucose was not significantly inhibited by high concentrations (100 mM) of either L-glucose or 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, a non-metabolizable but actively transported D-glucose analogue. Second, using intact house sparrows, we found that fractional absorption of the L-glucose tracer was significantly increased, not reduced, when gavaged along with 200 mM 3-O-methyl-D-glucose. This result was confirmed in another experiment where L-glucose fractional absorption was significantly higher in the presence vs. absence of food in the gut. The greater absorption was apparently not due simply to longer retention time of digesta, because no significant difference was found among retention times. Our results are consistent with the idea that L-glucose is absorbed in a non-mediated fashion, largely via the paracellular pathway in vivo.