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. 1968 Nov;199(1):137-50.
doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1968.sp008643.

Disaccharide absorption by amphibian small intestine in vitro

Disaccharide absorption by amphibian small intestine in vitro

D S Parsons et al. J Physiol. 1968 Nov.

Abstract

1. An account is given of the absorption of disaccharides by the small intestine of Rana temporaria, R. pipiens and Bufo vulgaris perfused in vitro through the vascular system. Maltase and trehalase activity are found in the intestine of all three species; very small amounts of sucrase are present in the intestine of R. pipiens but there is no evidence for the presence of lactase in any of the animals studied.2. During maltose absorption free glucose appears in the vascular effluent and in the intestinal lumen. Only very small quantities of disaccharide are found in the vascular effluent. The concentration of free glucose in the intestinal lumen during maltose absorption is not high enough to account for the rates of glucose transport observed. The rate of appearance of glucose in the vascular effluent is determined by the concentration of disaccharide in the luminal fluid, and hexose, free in solution in the lumen, is not an obligatory intermediate in the process of disaccharide absorption.3. For R. pipiens more than 90% of the maltase activity in the system is present in the intestinal wall and the rate of maltose hydrolysis by maltase, free in the intestinal lumen, is found to be inadequate to account for the rates of appearance of glucose observed to occur in the lumen and in the vascular effluent. It is not possible to wash away maltase activity from the intestinal wall.4. The kinetic properties of maltase and trehalase acting in situ are of the Michaelis-Menten type; the apparent K(m) is 2 mM for maltase, and 3 mM for trehalase.5. The relationship which exists between the rate of absorption of glucose and the concentration in the luminal fluid of either disaccharide or free glucose is of the Michaelis-Menten type. Expressed in molar units, the apparent K(m) for the glucose transport is about one fifth that of the disaccharidase. The maximum rate of glucose transport observed is less than the maximum rate of disaccharide hydrolysis. In R. pipiens equimolar concentrations in the intestinal lumen of the monomer free glucose, or of the dimer, maltose, yield approximately equal rates of transport of the free hexose.6. It is concluded that in the amphibian, either intestine disaccharide hydrolysis and glucose transport are functions of separate subcellular systems which spatially are very closely related, or that the hydrolysis and transport are different facets of the activity of a common system.

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References

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