Effects of Cycloheximide on the Response of Intestinal Mucosa to Cholera Enterotoxin
Open Access
- 1 June 1973
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 52 (6) , 1376-1383
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci107310
Abstract
Prior studies have indicated that effects of cholera enterotoxin (CT) on the small intestine are delayed in onset and involve an interaction with adenyl cyclase in the mucosa. It has also been shown that the administration of cycloheximide to rabbits in doses which inhibit crypt cell mitoses (20 mg/kg), diminishes CT-induced fluid production in jejunal loops. These latter studies have been interpreted as indications that CT-related intestinal secretion is a crypt cell function and that it is mediated by a CT-induced protein. The present study was undertaken to delineate more precisely the nature of the interaction in the intestine between cycloheximide and cholera toxin. Pretreatment of rabbits with cycloheximide reduced by 60% the secretory response to CT in isolated ileal loops with intact blood supply. Sodium and chloride flux measurements on mucosa isolated from these and control loops indicated that this antisecretory effect of cycloheximide persists in vitro. Measurements of radioactive leucine incorporation into mucosal protein indicated that the dose of cycloheximide employed inhibited protein synthesis by 90%. This inhibitory effect was shown to be independent of any effect of cycloheximide on amino acid uptake across the brush border. Measurements of adenyl cyclase activity and cyclic AMP levels in ileal mucosa of cycloheximide pretreated and control animals indicated that cycloheximide did not diminish the CT-induced increases in these parameters. These observations demonstrate that cycloheximide reduces CT-induced intestinal fluid production without interfering with the CT-induced augmentation of adenyl cyclase activity or the consequent rise in cyclic. AMP concentration. Since the antisecretory effect of cycloheximide persists in vitro, it probably involves a direct interaction of the antibiotic with mucosal cell ion transport mechanisms rather than an indirect effect mediated by other humoral or neurogenic factors. The present observations also suggest that the secretory response of the intestine to CT involves neither the synthesis of new adenyl cyclase nor that of a protein modifying its activity.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reversal of cholera exotoxin-induced jejunal secretion by cycloheximide.1970
- Stimulation of Glycerol Production in Fat Cells by Cholera ToxinNature, 1970
- Digestion: Intestinal SecretionAnnual Review of Physiology, 1970
- Intestinal fluid and electrolyte transport in human choleraJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1970
- Unidirectional Sodium Flux in Small Intestine in Experimental Canine CholeraThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1969
- Inhibition of Cholera Toxin Action in the Rabbit by CycloheximideGastroenterology, 1969
- STUDIES ON THE MODE OF ACTION OF DIPHTHERIA TOXINThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1969
- A simple, sensitive method for the assay of adenyl cyclase.1968
- Site and characteristics of electrolyte loss and effect of intraluminal glucose in experimental canine choleraJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1968
- A Permeability Factor (Toxin) Found in Cholera Stools and Culture Filtrates and its Neutralization by Convalescent Cholera SeraNature, 1965