Abstract
Intestinal absorption of most nutrients is enhanced in diabetic rats. We wished to test the hypothesis that manipulation of dietary fatty acids will modify enhanced uptake of glucose in rats with established streptozotocin-diabetes. Chow-fed control rats or animals with one week of streptozotocin-diabetes were continued on chow or were fed ad libitum for three weeks with semisynthetic isocaloric diets containing a high content of either essential polyunsaturated or non-essential saturated fatty acids. The jejunal and ileal in vitro uptake of varying concentrations of glucose was much higher in diabetic than controls rats fed chow or the saturated fatty acid diet. In contrast, the enhanced uptake of this sugar was reduced or normalized in diabetic rats fed the polyunsaturated fatty acid diet. Feeding the polyunsaturated fatty acid diet was associated with increased brush-border membrane activity of alkaline phosphatase in diabetic jejunum and ileum, but neither the saturated fatty acid diet nor the polyunsaturated fatty acid diet altered brush-border membrane cholesterol or phospholipids in control or in diabetic rats. Mucosal surface area was similar in diabetic rats fed the saturated fatty acid diet or the polyunsaturated fatty acid diet. Thus, (1) feeding the polyunsaturated fatty acid diet diminishes the enhanced jejunal and ileal uptake of glucose in diabetic rats, and (2) the influence of the polyunsaturated fatty acid diet on uptake in diabetic rats was not explained by alterations in intestinal morphology or brush-border membrane content of cholesterol or phospholipids. This study suggests that manipulation of dietary lipids may play a role in the normalization of the enhanced intestinal glucose uptake in rats with established diabetes.
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