Publications by authors named "Ugolev A"

The absorption of glucose (free, and released from membrane hydrolysis of maltose) and water in the isolated loop of the rat small intestine was studied in chronic experiments. Even at maximum glucose (75 mmol/l) or maltose (37.5 mmol/l) concentrations the rate of glucose transfer by solvent drag and by diffusion did not exceed 13% and 25%, respectively, of the total rate of glucose absorption.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Morphological examination of isolated enterocytes obtained-from the rat jejunum initial region by mechanical method after the previous treatment with ethylendiamintetracetic acid disodium salt included staining with hematoxylin, carmin and janus green. Histochemical reaction to alcaline phosphatase, succinate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, ATP-ase and glycosaminoglycans were performed. Significant resemblance between the main cytological and cytochemical characteristics of the isolated enterocytes and those of the intestinal epithelium was demonstrated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To analyze structural changes of intercellular relationships of the enterocytes during glycine, glucose, and triolein absorption the structural and immunocytochemical methods of electron microscopy were used. The study was carried out on the proximal part of the rat small intestine in acute and chronic experiments. In the acute ones glucose or glycine solutions (both of 10 and 40 mM) or triolein emulsion (0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The large intestine was found to reveal an obvious activity of various aminopeptidases and genuine dipeptidases in dogs and in humans. A dipeptidase was found specific by its independence of the C-terminal configuration of the peptide. This peptidase in an intrinsic membrane protein.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Under conditions of chronic experiment the circadian cycle of glucose transport was determined. An isolated proximal area of the small intestine was perfused by glucose, fructose, medical bile and Ringer's solutions in various intervals of the 24 hour period. The circadian cycle of glucose absorption is disturbed in the fasting rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A wide range of digestive enzymes with different cellular location (membrane, intracellular, Lysosomal) was determined in gastrointestinal organs (stomach, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, colon) as well as in undigestive organs (liver, kidney, spleen) in normal conditions and in altered functional states (fasting, refeeding). High levels of peptidase activity was noted in undigestive organs and the colon as compared to that in the small intestine. Adaptive responses were (revealed not only for a number of membrane enzymes but also for intracellular ones including those in undigestive organs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Using casein hydrolysates and the amino-acid mixture applied to mucosal or serosal surfaces, their effect on the transport of free glycine, glycine formed during glycyl glycine hydrolysis, and galactose, was studied in the small intestine. The data obtained suggest a mechanism of peptide transport in the enterocytes as well as a possibility of a regulatory effect of the peptides contained in casein hydrolysates on the transport of some basic nutrients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Using a new, in vitro, experimental approach the transport of glucose, galactose, fructose and glycine in seroso-mucosal direction in the small intestine, was studied under different modes of oxygenation. In case of monosaccharides under the oxygenation from serosal surface, the substrate concentration is lower in the small intestine tissue than under anoxia. The effect of the oxygenation from serosal surface on the galactose transport was shown to be sensitive to absence of sodium ions, ouabain, phloretin, and not sensitive to phlorizin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The mechanism of trans-sorption was shown to be based on mobile adsorption of various substances at specific and unspecific sites localised in spatially organised systems integrated within premembrane structures. Some specifics and possible physiological significance of trans-sorption are discussed using mathematical models of nutrients transfer across autonomous premembrane layer in the small intestine.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ageing was shown to be accompanied by changes of the activity levels of the small intestine's carbohydrases, dipeptidases, and alkaline phosphatases. The changes occurred both under normal conditions and after operations on the small intestine. In ageing, the small intestine's capacity for the homeomorphosis decreases irrespective of either increase or decrease in the functional loading.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The activity of the small intestine's peptide hydrolases is higher in 1-day old rats than in adult rats, whereas levels of activity of alkaline phosphatase and diglycyl glycine peptidase do not differ significantly in these two groups of the rats. Our own data on carbohydrases corroborate other authors' evidence and reveals that activities of lactase, sucrase and maltase are either absent or very low in the first days of life and sharply increase by the third week of postnatal development. Adaptive changes of regulatory properties of lactase and alkaline phosphatase are revealed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The small intestine's barrier functions are reviewed. The data on mechanical (passive) and active protective systems of the organism against various antigens, toxic substances and proteins, is presented. An important role of these protective systems as an enzyme apparatus of epithelial and postepithelial layers of the small intestine's mucose, is shown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The paper presents the main aspects of the theory of elementary functional blocks. In accordance with the theory considered high specialization of the complex functions could be reached due to the recombination and transposition of a large though limited set of molecular machines realizing elementary biological operations. The authors proved that the theory of universal functional blocks became a fundamental aspect of the medical theory as it permitted one not only to explain and classify a certain part of clinical and clinicophysiological phenomenology but was of significant prognostic value.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In suckling rats whose mothers had had an immobilisation stress or been injected HC and T4 at the last day of their pregnancy, the sucrase induction decreased in the small intestine, if the HC was injected on the 10th day of life. The hormone injection to 1-day suckling rats did not affect the induction. These effects seem to be exerted not by the direct permeation of hormone from mother to litter but to be mediated rather by a special factor "stressin".

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effects of the agonist of the glucocorticoid hormones dexamethasone and dopamine antagonist--haloperidol on the concentration of immunoreactive alpha-, beta- and gamma-endorphins in duodenum, ileum, and jejunum of rats were studied. Besides the extracts of the intestines, the immunoreactive endorphins were measured in the extracts of their mucosa-submucosa and muscle-serous layers, that allowed to separate the endorphin-producing cells of the nervous system (muscle-serous layer) from endorphin producing cells of endocrine and immune systems (mucosa-submucosa layer). The injection of dexamethasone (0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Proceeding from the newly obtained evidence on the distribution of digestive enzymes in mucosal, submucosal and muscular layers of the small intestine in rats, a hypothesis has been formulated: in addition to the enterocyte enzyme complex forming the epithelial barrier, there seems to exist a postepithelial barrier formed by the enzymes localized in subepithelial structures. The efficiency of this second barrier was manifested by the study of the peptide hydrolysis and transport using everted intact and de-epithelialized intestinal sacs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The influence of oxygen tension on values of transmembrane potentials in rat liver cell was investigated. The membrane potential was assessed by the uptake TPP as was determined on the ion-selective electrode. Infusion of inhibitors oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis to incubation medium caused depolarization on the mitochondrial, and, the plasma membranes of this cell.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF