Abstract

It is a well-known phenomenon that serum gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (gamma-GTP, EC 2.3.2.2.) activity is increased after chronic consumption of ethanol, and gamma-GTP has been, therefore, widely used as a sensitive marker for detection of alcoholism and its related liver disease. However, the precise mechanisms whereby the chronic ethanol consumption leads to an increase in serum gamma-GTP activity are not fully understood. In the present study, we investigated the relationship between the intestinal and serum gamma-GTP activities after chronic ethanol consumption both in rats and humans. Chronic ethanol feeding to rats resulted in a significant increase in serum gamma-GTP activity associated with a significant increment of the intestinal gamma-GTP activity. The histochemical staining of gamma-GTP in the mucosa of the small intestine of these animals demonstrated enhanced gamma-GTP activity at the microvilli of the brush border membrane, lamina propria of the mucosa, and endoplasmic reticulum of the intestinal epithelial cell. The augmented activity in the lamina propria was mainly localized at the submucosal lymphatics. Histology of the small intestine of human alcoholics was, more or less, similar to those observed in alcoholic rats. We further investigated the gamma-GTP activity in the mesenteric lymph using the animal model of lymphorrhea, and found that the gamma-GTP activity was increased by 83% when expressed per unit of lymph in the ethanol-fed rat, accompanied by a marked decrease of serum gamma-GTP activity, suggesting a close relationship between the serum and the intestinal gamma-GTP via the lymphatic channel.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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