Abstract

The effect of mitomycin C pre-administration on the d-glucose transport system in the intestinal brush-border membrane of rat small intestine was examined by a rapid filtration technique. Forty-eight hours following the intravenous administration of mitomycin C, there were extensive and severe mucosal derangements. At this time point, membrane vesicles were prepared from the mitomycin-C-pretreated and control rats. Binding studies indicated that d-glucose entered into the intravesicular space of vesicles even in the case of mitomycin-C-pretreated rats. Vesicles obtained from both the mitomycin-C-pretreated and the control rats showed sodium-dependent uptake of d-glucose, but the initial uptake at 15 sec was significantly greater in control rats than in mitomycin-C-pretreated rats. Comparison of kinetic parameters of d-glucose transport indicated that K m was not significantly different between control and mitomycin-C-pretreated rats. The pretreatment with mitomycin C decreased V max and increased the diffusional permeability to d-glucose considerably. These changes induced by mitomycin C seemed to derive not from a direct effect on mature enterocytes but from an indirect effect secondary to mitotic inhibition in the crypts.

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