Development of active and passive transport of bile acids in rabbit intestine (original) (raw)

1987, Mechanisms of Ageing and Development

Previous studies have indicated that saturable, N absent in the ileum throughout most of the suckling t ileal bile acid uptake which occurs during weaning resl in functional bile acid carriers within the ileal brush 1 undertaken in weanling and adult rabbits to establish active ileal and passive jejunal and colonic uptake of 8 a range of concentrations of cholic (C), taurocholic (T(cholic (CDC), tauroehenodeoxycholic (TCDC), glychoc cholic (I)C) and taurodeoxycholic (TI)C) acid was detl TC, GC, DC and TI)C was greater in adult than in we~)rhea and mat me maturatac results primarily through an inc border membrane. This stud~ establish the effect of maturation ol bile acids. The in vitro upta (TC), glycocholic (GC), chenod¢ rchochenodeoxycholic (GCI)C), de determined. Active ileal uptake ruling animals, whereas uptaJ was similar in both groups. The relative permeability for p~ o the jejunum and colon was similar in young and adult rat area was similar in the two groups, but was greater in the i ,' weanling rabbits due to an increase in villus height, width serosal length. However, the age-associated differences in a not explained simply on the basis of these differences in • the concentration of bile acids in the intestinal lumen, q }it from weanling to adulthood does not influence the rel the jejunum or colon to bile acids, but does increase active td unconjugated cholic acid and deoxycholic acid, but not c[ 1; Aging; Bile acids; Colon; Ileum; Jejunum; Ontogeny; P~