Publication | Open Access
Demonstration of a pH gradient across the mucus layer on the surface of human gastric mucosa in vitro.
127
Citations
10
References
1982
Year
Mucus LayerGastroenterologyHuman Gastric MucosaPh GradientDigestive TractOxidative StressInflammationToxicologyClinical ChemistryRabbit Fundic MucosaEsophagusAllergyFood DigestionPharmacologyProtective BarrierPhysiologyMicrobiologyGut BarrierMedicine
In previous studies we have demonstrated a hydrogen ion concentration gradient across the mucus on rat and rabbit fundic mucosa, in vivo and in vitro respectively, observations which support the possibility of a 'mucus-bicarbonate' protective barrier. In the present studies we have demonstrated a similar gradient across the mucus on human gastric mucosa in vitro. The minimum mean hydrogen ion concentration at the mucus-epithelium interface was 1 . 1 X 10(-4) mM (pH 6 . 96, n = 10) when the luminal concentration was 5 . 6 mM (pH 2 . 25). Aspirin (10 mM) and N-acetyl cysteine (306 mM) (5%) increased the minimum intra-mucus hydrogen ion concentration and the gradient was overwhelmed by a luminal hydrogen ion concentration of 40 mM (pH 1 . 4). These results suggest that a hydrogen ion concentration gradient exists across the mucus on human gastric mucosa and that potential damaging agents may act by compromising one or other of th components of this 'mucus-alkaline', presumed 'mucus-bicarbonate', barrier.
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