Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology (Nov 2007)

Influence of starch and casein administered postruminally on small intestinal sodium-glucose cotransport activity and expression

  • Kátia Cylene Guimaraes,
  • Sarah Rodrigues Hazelton,
  • James Clyde Matthews,
  • Kendall Carl Swanson,
  • David Lee Harmon,
  • Antonio Ferriani Branco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S1516-89132007000700007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50, no. 6
pp. 963 – 970

Abstract

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Twenty-four Holstein steer calves (88 ± 3kg) with abomasal catheters were randomly assigned within blocks to one of four treatments. The treatments consisted of four abomasal infusions: water (control), 4 g/kg BW.d-1 of partially hydrolyzed starch (SH), 0.6 g/kg BW.d-1 of casein, and a mix of SH + casein. The small intestine was collected and five equidistan, 1m sites were identified (duodenum, jejunum 1, jejunum 2 jejunum 3 and ileum). Maltase specific activity in mucosal homogenate and brush border membrane vesicles, SGLT1 protein abundance, and sodium-dependent glucose uptake in brush border membrane vesicles did not differ between the calves receiving different abomasal infusion treatments. However, maltase specific activity in homogenates and brush border membrane vesicles increased four-fold from the duodenum to the first jejunal site before declining steadily towards the ileum (p=0.0145 p=0.0020, respectively). The SGLT1 abundance differed by intestinal sampling site (p=0.0162). These data indicated that cattle might not have the ability to alter the capacity for glucose uptake when challenged with different substrates and that the regulation of SGLT1 expression could differ between bovine and other species.

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