Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9921263 European Journal of Pharmacology 2005 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
Intestinal secretory response is altered during colonic development. The aim of this report was to study the developmental changes of the Ca2+- and cAMP-induced regulatory pathways with special attention to the direct and indirect effect of secretagogues on the colonic epithelium. We investigated the effect of bethanechol, 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), and histamine on Cl− secretion and stimulation of intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) and cAMP in the distal colon of suckling, weanling and adult rats. In the presence of tetrodotoxin, immature colon of suckling and weanling rats displayed higher potency (EC50) of 5-HT to stimulate Cl− secretion, whereas the potency of histamine was not changed during development. The potency of bethanechol was reduced during weaning and partially restored in adulthood. 5-HT increased cAMP level similarly in both neonatal and adult colonic crypts, but the adults had higher basal level of cAMP than suckling rats. Also the effect of bethanechol on [Ca2+]i was independent of colonic maturation. The results suggest that colonic Cl− secretion displays developmental changes of regulation depending on the non-neural secretagogue-signalling pathway and that these developmental changes seem to be localized somewhere outside colonocytes.
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