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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 292: G467-G474, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajpgi.00503.2005
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TRANSLATIONAL PHYSIOLOGY

Neutral Na-amino acid cotransport is differentially regulated by glucocorticoids in the normal and chronically inflamed rabbit small intestine

Uma Sundaram,2 Sheik Wisel,1 and Steven Coon2

1Ohio State University School of Medicine, Columbus, Ohio; and 2Section of Digestive Diseases, Department of Medicine, West Virginia University Medical Center, Morgantown, West Virginia

Submitted 24 October 2005 ; accepted in final form 14 March 2006

ABSTRACT

Neutral Na-amino acid cotransport by system ATB0 [e.g., Na-alanine cotransport (NAcT)] is an important means of assimilation of amino acids in the intestine. NAcT is inhibited during chronic intestinal inflammation by an alteration in the affinity for the amino acid. How glucocorticoids, a standard of treatment for diseases characterized by chronic intestinal inflammation, may affect NAcT during chronic enteritis is not known. Thus we first demonstrated that methylprednisolone (MP) stimulated NAcT in the normal intestine. The mechanism of stimulation was secondary to an increase in cotransporter numbers without an alteration in the affinity for the amino acid. Treatment with MP reversed the reduction in NAcT in villus cells from the chronically inflamed intestine. MP also alleviated the decrease in Na-K-ATPase activity in villus cells during chronic enteritis. However, MP treatment reversed the NAcT inhibition in villus cell brush border membrane vesicles from the inflamed intestine, which suggested an effect of MP at the level of the cotransporter itself. Kinetic studies demonstrated that the reversal of NAcT inhibition by MP was secondary to restoration in the affinity for the amino acid without a change in the Vmax. Unaltered steady-state mRNA and immunoreactive protein levels of NAcT also indicated that the number of cotransporters was unchanged after MP treatment in the chronically inflamed intestine. These results indicated that MP reversed NAcT inhibition in the chronically inflamed intestine by restoring the affinity of the transporter for the amino acid while it stimulated NAcT in the normal intestine by increasing the cotransporter numbers. Therefore, MP differentially regulates NAcT in the normal and chronically inflamed intestine.

glucocorticoids; inflammation; amino acid transport; sodium transport; intestinal absorption



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: U. Sundaram, Section of Digestive Diseases, Dept. of Medicine, West Virginia Univ. School of Medicine, One Medical Center Drive, Morgantown, WV 26506 (e-mail: usundaram{at}hsc.wvu.edu)




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