63 research outputs found
Lubiprostone Stimulates Duodenal Bicarbonate Secretion in Rats
Lubiprostone, a bicyclic fatty acid, is used for the treatment of chronic constipation. No published study has addressed the effect of lubiprostone on intestinal ion secretion in vivo.
The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that lubiprostone augments duodenal HCO3
− secretion (DBS).
Rat proximal duodenal loops were perfused with pH 7.0 Krebs, control vehicle (medium-chain triglycerides), or lubiprostone (0.1–10 μM). We measured DBS with flow-through pH and CO2 electrodes, perfusate [Cl−] with a Cl− electrode, and water flux using a non-absorbable ferrocyanide marker. Some rats were pretreated with a potent, selective CFTR antagonist, CFTRinh-172 (1 mg/kg, ip), 1 h before experiments.
Perfusion of lubiprostone concentration dependently increased DBS, whereas net Cl− output and net water output were only increased at 0.1 μM, compared with vehicle. CFTRinh-172 reduced lubiprostone (10 μM)-induced DBS increase, whereas net Cl− output was also unchanged. Nevertheless, CFTRinh-172 reduced basal net water output, which was reversed by lubiprostone. Furthermore, lubiprostone-induced DBS was inhibited by EP4 receptor antagonist, not by an EP1/2 receptor antagonist or by indomethacin pretreatment.
In this first study of the effect of lubiprostone on intestinal ion secretion in vivo, lubiprostone stimulated CFTR-dependent DBS without changing net Cl− secretion. This effect supports the hypothesis that Cl− secreted by CFTR is recycled across the apical membrane by anion exchangers. Recovery of water output during CFTR inhibition suggests that lubiprostone may improve the intestinal phenotype in CF patients. Furthermore, increased DBS suggests that lubiprostone may protect the duodenum from acid-induced injury via EP4 receptor activation
Measuring, in solution, multiple-fluorophore labeling by combining Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy and photobleaching
Determining the number of fluorescent entities that are coupled to a given
molecule (DNA, protein, etc.) is a key point of numerous biological studies,
especially those based on a single molecule approach. Reliable methods are
important, in this context, not only to characterize the labeling process, but
also to quantify interactions, for instance within molecular complexes. We
combined Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) and photobleaching
experiments to measure the effective number of molecules and the molecular
brightness as a function of the total fluorescence count rate on solutions of
cDNA (containing a few percent of C bases labeled with Alexa Fluor 647). Here,
photobleaching is used as a control parameter to vary the experimental outputs
(brightness and number of molecules). Assuming a Poissonian distribution of the
number of fluorescent labels per cDNA, the FCS-photobleaching data could be
easily fit to yield the mean number of fluorescent labels per cDNA strand (@
2). This number could not be determined solely on the basis of the cDNA
brightness, because of both the statistical distribution of the number of
fluorescent labels and their unknown brightness when incorporated in cDNA. The
statistical distribution of the number of fluorophores labeling cDNA was
confirmed by analyzing the photon count distribution (with the cumulant
method), which showed clearly that the brightness of cDNA strands varies from
one molecule to the other.Comment: 38 pages (avec les figures
Stereoelectronic inhibition of deprotonation in the radical cation of N-benzyl piperidine: a contribution to the debate on the mechanism of N-dealkylation of tertiary amines
Evidence for a stereoelectronic inhibition of deprotonation of the radical cation of N-benzylpiperidine is presented. This stereoelectronic effect, which is due to the cyclic structure of the precursor, provides a tool to differentiate hydrogen-atom-versus electron-transfer routes in the biomimetic oxidative N-dealkylation of tertiary amines: the electron-transfer route appears to be the operating mechanism
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