D-Glucose transport was investigated in isolated brush-border membrane vesicles from human small intestine. Characteristics of D-glucose transport from the jejunum were compared with that in the mid and terminal ileum. Jejunal and mid-ileal D-glucose transport was Na+-dependent and electrogenic. The transient overshoot of jejunal D-glucose transport was significantly greater than corresponding values in mid-ileum. The terminal ileum did not exhibit Na+-dependent D-glucose transport, but did exhibit Na+-dependent taurocholate transport. Na+-glucose co-transport activity as measured by tracer-exchange experiments was greatest in the jejunum, and diminished aborally. We conclude that D-glucose transport in man is Na+-dependent and electrogenic in the proximal intestine and directly related to the activity of D-glucose-Na+ transporters present in the brush-border membranes. D-Glucose transport in the terminal ileum resembles colonic transport of D-glucose.
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July 1986
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Research Article|
July 01 1986
Aboral changes in d-glucose transport by human intestinal brush-border membrane vesicles
Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Online ISSN: 1470-8728
Print ISSN: 0264-6021
© 1986 London: The Biochemical Society
1986
Biochem J (1986) 237 (1): 229–234.
Citation
M K Bluett, N N Abumrad, N Arab, F K Ghishan; Aboral changes in d-glucose transport by human intestinal brush-border membrane vesicles. Biochem J 1 July 1986; 237 (1): 229–234. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2370229
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