Abstract

SUMMARY To examine the postnatal development of equine small intestine, biopsy specimens of jejunal mucosa from 8 ponies, between 6 and 28 weeks old, were subjected to analytical subcellular fractionation and assay organelle marker enzymes. Fractionation revealed a reduction in the particulate brush border component of β-galactosidase (lactase) activity between 6 and 28 weeks, and a corresponding increase in soluble activity, although the reduction in mean specific activity was not significant. There also was a decrease in the proportion of brush border to soluble aminopeptidase N activity, a relative loss of brush border γ-glutamyltransferase and a considerable decrease the specific activity of alkaline phosphatase throughout the gradient fractions. In contrast, there were marked increases in activities α-glucosidase (maltase) and sucrase in the older ponies, accompanied by considerable changes in the intracellular distribution of particulate α-glucosidase activity, which was predominantly associated with endoplasmic reticulum at 6 weeks, whereas the large increase in activity observed by 28 weeks was clearly associated with the brush border. The modal density brush borders also increased with age, suggestive of an increase in the glycoprotein-to-lipid ratio of the microvillar membrane. In contrast to these brush border changes, there was relatively little alteration in the activities or density distributions of marker enzymes for endoplasmic reticulum, basolateral membranes, mitochondria, or lysosomes. These findings indicate that maturation of equine intestinal epithelium during the first few months of life results in major changes in the properties and enzyme composition of enterocyte brush borders.

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