TRANSFER OF COBALAMIN FROM THE COBALAMIN-BINDING PROTEIN OF EGG-YOLK TO R-BINDER OF HUMAN SALIVA AND GASTRIC-JUICE

被引:26
作者
DELCORRAL, A [1 ]
CARMEL, R [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV SO CALIF, SCH MED, DEPT MED, RMR 306, 2025 ZONAL AVE, LOS ANGELES, CA 90033 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0016-5085(90)91076-I
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
Patients may fail to absorb cobalamin (vitamin B12) bound to food even when they have adequate intrinsic factor to absorb free cobalamin normally. We studied cobalamin transfer from egg yolk cobalamin-binding protein to human saliva and gastric juice as a model of this important first step in cobalamin assimilation. The cobalamin-binding protein of egg yolk eluted with human R binder on Sephadex gel chromatography and bound cobalamin with a comparable affinity, but it did not cross-react with R binder immunologically. Transfer of cobalamin from egg yolk to saliva or gastric juice R binder did not occur at neutral pH. Slight transfer (8%-12% of the 57Co-cobalamin bound to egg yolk) occurred when the saliva was acidified to pH 1.5. This minor transfer by acid was not inhibited by pepstatin A, a pepsin inhibitor. Acidification caused variable transfer to gastric juice R binder (12%-40%) that appeared to be partially due to residual gastric pepsin activity. Adding 1200 U of pepsin per milliliter enhanced cobalamin transfer to saliva or gastric juice R binders (39%-58% transfer). At no time was cobalamin transferred directly to intrinsic factor; R binder-deficient gastric juice failed to accept cobalamin from egg yolk. The transfer of cobalamin from egg yolk to human R binder requires both an acid pH and pepsin activity. While as little as 30 U of pepsin added per milliliter of saliva promoted transfer of cobalamin, the requirement for an acid pH was very strict. Virtually no transfer occurred when pH exceeded 2.0, regardless of the amount of pepsin present. Acid provided an optimal pH for pepsin activity and, to a lesser extent, affected transfer by a mechanism unrelated to pepsin. Our data suggest that compromised pepsin secretion and, probably even more importantly, compromised acid secretion interfere with transfer of food cobalamin to R binder. © 1990.
引用
收藏
页码:1460 / 1466
页数:7
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   EFFECT OF ACID PEPTIC DIGESTION ON FREE AND TISSUE-BOUND COBALAMINS [J].
ADAMS, JF ;
KENNEDY, EH ;
THOMSON, J ;
WILLIAMSON, J .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 1968, 22 (01) :111-+
[2]   EFFECT OF PROTEOLYTIC-ENZYMES ON BINDING OF COBALAMIN TO R-PROTEIN AND INTRINSIC-FACTOR - INVITRO EVIDENCE THAT A FAILURE TO PARTIALLY DEGRADE R-PROTEIN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR COBALAMIN MALABSORPTION IN PANCREATIC INSUFFICIENCY [J].
ALLEN, RH ;
SEETHARAM, B ;
PODELL, E ;
ALPERS, DH .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1978, 61 (01) :47-54
[3]   EFFECT OF PROTEOLYTIC-ENZYMES ON THE VITAMIN-B12-BINDING PROTEINS OF HUMAN GASTRIC-JUICE AND SALIVA [J].
ANDERSEN, KJ ;
VONDERLIPPE, G .
SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 1979, 14 (07) :833-838
[4]   The estimation of pepsin with hemoglobin [J].
Anson, ML ;
Mirsky, AE .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY, 1932, 16 (01) :59-63
[5]   INVITRO EFFECT OF DUODENAL JUICE ON R-BINDERS COBALAMIN COMPLEXES IN SUBJECTS WITH PANCREATIC INSUFFICIENCY - CORRELATION WITH COBALAMIN ABSORPTION [J].
BELAICHE, J ;
ZITTOUN, J ;
MARQUET, J ;
YVART, J ;
CATTAN, D .
GUT, 1987, 28 (01) :70-74
[6]  
CARMEL R, 1985, P SOC EXP BIOL MED, V178, P143
[7]   CHARACTERIZATION OF PURE HUMAN PANCREATIC-JUICE - COBALAMIN CONTENT, COBALAMIN-BINDING PROTEINS AND ACTIVITY AGAINST HUMAN R-BINDERS OF VARIOUS SECRETIONS [J].
CARMEL, R ;
ABRAMSON, SB ;
RENNER, IG .
CLINICAL SCIENCE, 1983, 64 (02) :193-205
[8]   NUTRITIONAL VITAMIN-B12 DEFICIENCY - POSSIBLE CONTRIBUTORY ROLE OF SUBTLE VITAMIN-B12 MALABSORPTION [J].
CARMEL, R .
ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 1978, 88 (05) :647-649
[9]  
CARMEL R, 1987, J LAB CLIN MED, V109, P454
[10]   FOOD COBALAMIN MALABSORPTION OCCURS FREQUENTLY IN PATIENTS WITH UNEXPLAINED LOW SERUM COBALAMIN LEVELS [J].
CARMEL, R ;
SINOW, RM ;
SIEGEL, ME ;
SAMLOFF, IM .
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 1988, 148 (08) :1715-1719