Abstract

In the rat, intestinal alkaline phosphatase (IAP) activity in the duodenum, but not jejunum, increases on day 22-24 after birth and exhibits higher activity hydrolysing phenyl phosphate (PhP) than beta-glycerophosphate (beta GP) [Moog and Yeh (1973) Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 44B, 657-666]. The mechanism underlying these developmental changes remains unknown. To define possible mechanisms, we have measured IAP activity and mRNA levels, and analysed IAP mRNA species and isoenzymes on postnatal days 12, 18, 24 and 32. Duodenal IAP activity and mRNA content were identical on postnatal days 12 and 18, but were 7-fold and 3-fold higher on day 24, respectively than on day 18. The increased IAP activity exhibited a high PhP/beta GP ratio and was accompanied by initial appearance of the 3.0 kb mRNA and 90 kDa isoenzyme. On day 32, duodenal IAP activity did not increase over the levels on day 24, whereas mRNA levels doubled. The lack of enzyme increase might be related in part to increased apical release, as luminal IAP activity increased from 2% of total mucosal IAP on days 12 and 18 to 7% and 14% on days 24 and 32 respectively. In the jejunum, IAP activity decreased postnatally, but mRNA content was unaltered; only the 2.7 kb mRNA and 65 kDa IAP isoenzyme were present. Administration of cortisone or cortisone+thyroxine induced simultaneous appearance of the duodenal 3.0 kb mRNA and 90 kDa isoenzyme with an increased PhP/beta GP ratio. Thus postnatal increase in duodenal IAP activity is related to the expression of a 90 kDa PhP-preferring isoenzyme encoded by the 3.0 kb mRNA. The low-PhP/beta GP-ratio 65 kDa isoenzyme is expressed in the duodenum and in the jejunum and is encoded by the 2.7 kb mRNA.

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