Key role of aldosterone and pericryptal myofibroblast growth in colonic permeability
- PMID: 18185073
- DOI: 10.1097/MPG.0b013e31812e680b
Key role of aldosterone and pericryptal myofibroblast growth in colonic permeability
Abstract
When sodium intake diminishes, both the kidney and distal colon contribute directly to sodium homeostasis. In response to a diet with low amounts of sodium, the body hormonal profile changes to produce different effects on crypt-colon permeability and absorption and in the pericryptal sheath surrounding distal colonic crypts. This adaptation produces an increase in Na absorption, a decreased crypt-wall permeability, and an activation of the growth of pericryptal myofibroblasts. The separate roles of the 2 main hormones implicated in the process, aldosterone and angiotensin II, until now have been unclear. Experiments conducted on adrenalectomized rats on low- and high-sodium diets, implanted with osmotic pumps perfusing either aldosterone or angiotensin II, allow us to discriminate between the effects of these hormones. In the distal colon, aldosterone acts as a trophic agent on the myofibroblasts layer and is the key hormone controlling colonic permeability, but angiotensin II alone has no discernable direct role in the process.
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