Vol. 283, Issue 3, G576-G586, September 2002
Physiological and morphological effects of alendronate on
rabbit esophageal epithelium
A.
Dobrucali1,
N.
A.
Tobey1,
M. S.
Awayda2,
C.
Argote1,
S.
Abdulnour-Nakhoul1,
W.
Shao2, and
R. C.
Orlando1
1 Department of Medicine, Section of
Gastroenterology and Hepatology and 2 Department of
Physiology, Tulane University School of Medicine and Veterans
Affairs Medical Center, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112
Alendronate, an aminobisphosphonate,
produces as a side effect a topical (pill induced) esophagitis. To gain
insight into this phenomenon, we assessed the effects of luminal
alendronate on both esophageal epithelial structure and function.
Sections of rabbit esophageal epithelium were exposed to luminal
alendronate at neutral or acidic pH while mounted in Ussing chambers to
monitor transmural electrical potential difference (PD), short-circuit current (Isc), and resistance (R).
Morphological changes were sought by light microscopy in hematoxylin
and eosin-stained sections. Impedance analysis was used for
localization of alendronate-induced effects on ion transport. Luminal,
but not serosal, alendronate (pH 6.9-7.2), increased PD and
Isc in a dose- and time-dependent manner, with
little change in R and mild edema of surface cell layers.
The changes in Isc (and PD) were reversible with
drug washout and could be prevented either by inhibition of Na,K-ATPase activity with serosal ouabain or by inhibition of apical Na channels with luminal acidification to pH 2.0 with HCl. An effect on apical Na
channel activity was also supported by impedance analysis. Luminal
alendronate at acidic pH was more damaging than either alendronate at
neutral pH or acidic pH alone. These data suggest that alendronate
stimulates net ion (Na) transport in esophageal epithelium by
increasing apical membrane sodium channel activity and that this occurs
with limited morphological change and no alteration in barrier
function. Also alendronate is far more damaging at acidic than at
neutral pH, suggesting its association with esophagitis requires
gastric acid for expression. This expression may occur either by
potentiation between the damaging effects of (refluxed) gastric acid
and drug or by acid-induced conversion of the drug to a more toxic form.
biphosphonates; esophagitis; transepithelial ion transport; Ussing
chamber; sodium channels