Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics
Online ISSN : 1880-0920
Print ISSN : 1347-4367
ISSN-L : 1347-4367
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NaPi-mediated Transcellular Permeation is the Dominant Route in Intestinal Inorganic Phosphate Absorption in Rats
Nobuaki ETOMikio TOMITAMasahiro HAYASHI
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2006 Volume 21 Issue 3 Pages 217-221

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Abstract

  Inorganic phosphate in food is absorbed two ways, the transcellular route via the brush border membrane and the paracellular route via tight junctions. NaPi, a sodium-dependent inorganic phosphate transporter, is expressed in rat and human intestine. However, the relative contribution of NaPi to total carrier-mediated transport of physiological concentrations of inorganic phosphate in rat intestine is not clear. Here, we characterized inorganic phosphate transport across the rat small intestine using a voltage-clamp analysis which allowed the diffrentiation of inorganic phosphate permeation through these two (transcellular and paracellular) routes. Results showed that, under a physiologically normal transmucosal electrical potential difference (about 2 mV), permeation of inorganic phosphate by the transcellular route was greater than that by the paracellular route. Further, transport was significantly decreased by the addition to the incubation medium of phosphonoformic acid, a sodium-dependent phosphate transporter inhibitor, and severely inhibited under sodium-free conditions. Similar results were obtained without the voltage-clamp. Together, these results suggest that NaPi-mediated transcellular permeation is the dominant route in the absorption of inorganic phosphate across the small intestine.

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© 2006 by The Japanese Society for the Study of Xenobiotics
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