There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
Isolated suspensions of colonocytes from the rat were used to assess utilization,
interaction, and fate of metabolic substrates normally obtained from colonic bacteria
(acetate, propionate, butyrate) or derived from the blood circulation to the colonic
mucosa (D-glucose, acetoacetate, L-glutamine). The short-chain fatty acid n-butyrate
(10 mM), on its own, accounted for 86% of the total oxygen consumption and suppressed
oxidation of endogenous fuel by 82%. Ths value was not altered by the addition of
acetoacetate (5 mM), of L-glutamine (5 mM), or of D-glucose (10 mM). Activation of
short-chain fatty acids by colonocytes proceeded in the order of butyrate greater
than acetate greater than propionate. D-Glucose on its own accounted for 30% of the
oxygen consumption by colonocytes and hardly suppressed utilization of endogenous
fuels. Colonocytes utilized ketone bodies (acetoacetate) and produced them (acetoacetate
and beta-hydroxybutyrate) from short-chain fatty acids. Considering the interaction
of substrates, isolated colonic epithelial cells utilized respiratory fuels in the
preferential order of butyrate greater than acetoacetate greater than glutamine greater
than glucose. The high rate of CO2 production from butyrate should be a worthwhile
means of examining the functional activity of the colonic mucosa clinically and in
vivo.