Active pyrimidine absorption by chicken colon.

Journal: Comparative Biochemistry And Physiology. A, Comparative Physiology
Published:
Abstract

Pyrimidine absorption by chicken large intestine was investigated employing the everted sac and flux chamber techniques. 3H-labelled uracil was used as substrate. The small intestine and the colon unlike the caecum, transported uracil from the mucosal to the serosal surface against a concentration gradient in the everted sac experiments. Furthermore, there was a net transport of uracil from the mucosal to the serosal side of the colon and jejunum in the flux chamber experiments. Uracil transport by the everted colon sacs against a concentration gradient was inhibited when the purine hypoxanthine was present in the incubation medium. Uracil transport by the everted colon sacs was also inhibited under anaerobic conditions and when 2,4-dinitrophenol was present in the incubation medium. Replacing the Na+ ions of the incubation medium by Li+ ions also caused an inhibition of uracil transport. It is concluded from these results that uracil (and probably other pyrimidines) are absorbed from the chicken colon by a Na+ ion-dependent active transport process having also an affinity for purines.

Authors
E Scharrer, L Stubenhofer, W Tiemeyer, C Bindl