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First published online September 19, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 3719-3728 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02436
Dietary acidification enhances phosphorus digestibility but decreases H+/K+-ATPase expression in rainbow trout
Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School, 185 South Orange Avenue, Newark, NJ 07103, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: ferraris{at}umdnj.edu)
Accepted 11 July 2006
Oxynticopeptic cells of fish stomach are thought to secrete less acid than
the specialized parietal cells of mammalian stomach. Gastric acidity, however,
has not been directly compared between fish and mammals. We therefore fed
rainbow trout and rats the same meal, and found that the lowest postprandial
pH of trout stomach was 2.7, which was only transiently sustained for 1 h,
whereas that of rat stomach was 1.3, which was sustained for 3 h. Postprandial
pH of the small intestine was slightly higher in trout (
8.0) than in rats
(
7.6), but pH of the large intestine was similar (
8.0). Addition of
acids to fish feeds, in an attempt to aid the weak acidity of fish stomach,
has been known to improve phosphorus digestibility, but its physiological
effect on fish stomach is not known. Exogenous acids did improve phosphorus
digestibility but also decreased steady-state mRNA expression of trout
H+/K+-ATPase (ATP4A, the proton pump) as well as
Na+/bicarbonate cotransporter (NBC), and had no effect on
gastrin-like mRNA and somastostatin (SST) mRNA abundance. Gastrin-like mRNA
and SST-2 mRNA were equally distributed between corpus and antrum. ATP4A mRNA
and NBC mRNA were in the corpus, whereas SST-1 mRNA was in the antrum. Trout
gastrin-like EST had modest homology to halibut and pufferfish gastrin,
whereas trout ATP4A mRNA had
95% amino acid homology with mammalian,
Xenopus and flounder ATP4A. Although ATP4A seems highly conserved
among vertebrates, gastric acidity is much less in trout than in rats,
explaining the low digestibility of bone phosphorus, abundant in fish diets.
Dietary acidification does not reduce acidity enough to markedly improve
phosphorus digestibility, perhaps because exogenous acids may inhibit
endogenous acid production.
Key words: gastrin, oxynticopeptic cells, proton pump, somatostatin, stomach pH