Abstract
The transport of water across epithelial layers is coupled with the transport of solutes (1-3). If an isosmotic solution is placed into the lumen of the intestine, net water transport or water absorption occurs as a consequence of a net solute transport. The solute primarily involved in the transport of water is the sodium ion which is actively transported into the intercellular spaces, causing these to become hyperosmotic; consequently, water is drawn osmotically into these spaces and then transferred into the serosal compartment or into the circulation. Such “local osmosis” has been demonstrated in various epithelial cells (4) and recently also in the rectal pads of insects (5).The sodium transport, which is responsible for most of the net water transport, is an active energy-requiring process. In vivo measurements in human indicated that the ileum is capable of net water absorption against some 10 times higher salt concentration gradient than the jejunum (6). A less striking topographic difference was ...
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More From: Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)
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