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Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095
We measured intestinal safety factors
(ratio of a physiological capacity to the load on it) for lactose
digestion in developing rat pups. Specifically, we assessed the
quantitative relationships between lactose load and the series
capacities of lactase and the
Na+-glucose cotransporter
(SGLT-1). Both capacities increased significantly with age in suckling
pups as a result of increasing intestinal mass and maintenance of
mass-specific activities. The youngest pups examined (5 days) had
surprisingly high safety factors of 8-13 for both lactase and
SGLT-1, possibly because milk contains lactase substrates other than
lactose; it also, however, suggests that their intestinal capacities
were being prepared to meet future demands rather than just current
ones. By day 10 (and also
at day 15), increased lactose loads
resulted in lower safety factors of 4-6, values more typical of
adult intestines. The safety factor of SGLT-1 in day
30 (weanling) and day
100 (adult) rats was only ~1.0. This was initially
unexpected, because most adult intestines maintain a modest reserve
capacity beyond nutrient load values, but postweaning rats appear to
use hindgut fermentation, assessed by gut morphology and hydrogen
production assays, as a built-in reserve capacity. The series
capacities of lactase and SGLT-1 varied in concert with each other over
ontogeny and as lactose load was manipulated by experimental variation
in litter size.
carbohydrate digestion; fermentation; glucose transport; rat; weaning
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