Abstract
The development of immune-mediated diabetes in BB rats may involve a defect of the gastrointestinal tract (GI), as suggested by increased gut permeability. This study aimed at measuring invertase, maltase, lactase, and peroxidase activities in the duodenum of diabetesprone BioBreeding (BBdp) rats and control BioBreeding rats (BBc) given free access to NIH-07 diet up to the time of killing at 60 66 d of age. After washing the entire small intestine, the duodenal mucosa was scraped off in the first 5-cm segment from the pylorus and frozen in distilled water. Invertase, maltase, and lactase activities were measured by monitoring the conversion of [U-(14)C]sucrose, [U-(14)C]maltose, and [D-[1-(14)C]glucose] lactose to radioactive hexoses, which were phosphorylated in the presence of adenosine triphosphatase and yeast hexokinase and then separated from their precursor by ion-exchange chromatography. Peroxidase activity was measured by a spectrophotometric procedure. In the BBdp rats, the activity of invertase, maltase, and lactase averaged, respectively, 70.2 +/- 4.4, 81.2 +/- 4.3, and 75.7 +/- 4.1% (n = 16 and p < 0.001 in all cases) of the control values found in BBc rats of the same sex. Inversely, after exclusion of two female BBc rats with abnormally high plasma D-glucose concentration, the activity of peroxidase in the BBdp rats averaged 157.4 +/- 20.0% (n = 16; p < 0.02) of the mean control value recorded in BBc rats of the same sex (100.0 +/- 9.3%; n = 14). These findings are compatible with the view that a proinflammatory state of the GI associated with compromise function may precede the occurrence of pancreatic insulitis in BBdp rats and, possibly, human subjects with type 1 diabetes.
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