Abstract

We studied the activity and kinetic parameters of microvillous enzymes in intestinal villous cells and the concentration of the secretory component (SC) of p-immunoglobulin A in subcellular fractions of crypt cells in 35-day-old rats made iron deficient from birth and in controls. The aim of the study is to investigate the biochemical basis for the decreased activity of brush-border disaccharidases observed in growing animals with chronic iron deficiency. In rats made iron deficient, the specific (per unit protein) and the total (per total intestinal length) activities of sucrase, lactase, maltase, aminopeptidase, and diamine oxidase were decreased from -17 to -66% compared with the activities measured in the controls. The lower activity of sucrase in the brush-border membrane of the iron-deficient rats was associated with much slower enzyme synthesis rate than in control animals. Km of sucrase was identical in both iron-deficient rats and controls, but the maximum velocity of enzyme reaction was reduced proportionally to the enzymatic activity, indicating a lesser amount of enzyme rather than an inactivation. Electron microscopy of epithelial villous cells from iron-deficient rats revealed a marked rarefaction of secretory granules (transport vesicles) without apparent change in the morphology of the brush-border membrane or of cellular organelles. In villus and crypt cells isolated from the jejunum of iron-deficient rats, SC concentration was reduced to a level about half that of the controls. When SC concentration was measured in subcellular fractions of crypt cells, SC content in each fraction was two to three times lower in iron-deprived rats than in controls without evidence of accumulation of the protein at a given subcellular level.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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