Active transport of C14-d-glucose by turtle small intestine

Abstract
An in vitro preparation was used to demonstrate that C14-d-glucose is taken up at the mucosal surface of turtle small intestine at 30 C. Movement of the sugar across the intestinal tissues and its release into the serosal fluid against an apparent concentration difference was shown. The source of the sugar entering the medium on the serosal side appeared to be, in part, the glucose taken up from the mucosal fluid, and, in part, some stored carbohydrate. Tissue analysis indicated the presence of a glycogenlike polysaccharide in the intestinal wall of both active and cold-torpid turtles. It was concluded that, during intestinal transport in Chrysemys picta, some of the glucose absorbed is converted to endogenous carbohydrate, or metabolized, and some is translocated.