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Role of lysophosphatidylcholine in brush-border intestinal alkaline phosphatase release and restoration

Authors :
Nakano, Takanari
Inoue, Ikuo
Alpers, David H.
Akiba, Yasutada
Katayama, Shigehiro
Shinozaki, Rina
Kaunitz, Jonathan D.
Ohshima, Susumu
Akita, Masumi
Takahashi, Seiichiro
Koyama, Iwao
Matsushita, Makoto
Komoda, Tsugikazu
Source :
The American Journal of Physiology. July, 2009, Vol. 297 Issue 1, pG207, 8 p.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Intestinal alkaline phosphatase (IAP) is a brush-border membrane ectoenzyme (BBM-IAP) that is released into the lumen (L-IAP) after a high-fat diet. We examined the effects of oil feeding and the addition of mixed-lipid micelles on the formation of L-IAP in oil-fed rat intestine, Caco-2 cell monolayers, and mouse intestinal loops. We localized IAP in the duodenum of rats fed corn oil using fluorescence microscopy with enzyme-labeled fluorescence-97 as substrate. Four hours after oil feeding, L-IAP increased ~10-fold accompanied by the loss of BBM-IAP, consistent with BBM-IAP release. Rat IAP isozyme mRNAs progressively increased 4-6 h after oil feeding, followed by the increase of IAP activity in the subapical location at 6 h, consistent with the restoration of IAP protein. Postprandial lipid-micelle components, sodium taurocholate with or without oleic acid, mono-oleylglycerol, cholesterol, or lysophosphatidylcholine (lysoPC) were applied singly or as mixed-lipid micelles to the apical surface of polarized Caco-2 cell monolayers. LysoPC increased L-IAP >10-fold over basal release. LysoPC released lAP into the apical medium more than other intestinal brush-border enzymes, 5'-nucleotidase, sucrase, aminopeptidase N, and lactase, without comparable lactate dehydrogenase release or cell injury. LysoPC increased human IAP mRNA levels by 1.5-fold in Caco-2 cells. Luminally applied lysoPC also increased release of IAP preferentially in mouse intestinal loops. These data show that lysoPC accelerates the formation of L-IAP from BBM-IAP, followed by enhanced IAP synthesis, suggesting the role that lysoPC might play in the turnover of brush-border proteins. Caco-2 cells; lipid absorption; small intestine; enzyme-labeled fluorescence-97

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029513
Volume :
297
Issue :
1
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
The American Journal of Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.204543988