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Mucosal permeability, regional differences

Precellular solute ionization dictates membrane permeability dependence on mucosal pH. Therefore, lumenal or cellular events that affect mucosal microclimate pH may alter the membrane transport of ionizable solutes. The mucosal microclimate pH is defined by a region in the neighborhood of the mucosal membrane in which pH is lower than in the lumenal fluid. This is the result of proton secretion by the enterocytes, for which outward diffusion is slowed by intestinal mucus. (In fact, mucosal secretion of any ion coupled with mucus-restricted diffusion will provide an ionic microclimate.) Important differences in solute transport between experimental systems may be due to differences in intestinal ions and mucus secretion. It might be anticipated that microclimate pH effects would be less pronounced in epithelial cell culture (devoid of goblet cells) transport studies than in whole intestinal tissue. [Pg.174]

Nejdfors P, Ekelund M, Jeppsson B, Westrom BR (2000) Mucosal in vitro permeability in the intestinal tract of the pig, the rat, and man Species- and region-related differences. Scand J Gastroenterol 5 501-507. [Pg.211]


See other pages where Mucosal permeability, regional differences is mentioned: [Pg.177]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.1073]    [Pg.2666]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.1368]    [Pg.342]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.1073 ]




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