Abstract

Sialyltransferase activity was assayed in rat intestinal cells isolated as fractions reflecting the villus-crypt axis of differentiation. In 13-day-old rats both endo- and exogenous sialyltransferase activity reached their maximum in undifferentiated crypt cells and their peaks overlapped. In contrast, sialyltransferase of the adult intestine was 4-fold lower than that of sucklings in the crypts, with slight tendency to be transferred to the villus cells. Hydrocortisone applied to 10-day-old rats caused three days later a precocious drop of sialyltransferase activity in the crypt cells. Unlike in vivo, glucocorticoid responsiveness was accompanied by increased sialyltransferase activity in fetal small intestine cultivated for 17 days.

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