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Intestinal absorption of two dipeptides in Hartnup disease

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TLDR
It is suggested that whereas normal subjects absorb essential amino acids by a dual mechanism of mucosal uptake of free amino acids and oligopeptides, nutrition in Hartnup disease is largely dependent on uptake of oligopes containing the amino acids affected by the intestinal transport defect of the disease.
Abstract
The results of oral tolerance tests of two dipeptides and of their constitutent amino acids are compared in normal subjects and in a case of Hartnup disease. In the control subjects the rate of absorption of phenylalanine from phenylalanyl-phenylalanine and of tryptophan from glycyl-tryptophan was slower than after the equivalent amount of the free amino acids. Absorption of the two essential amino acids (tryptophan and phenylalanine) in the patient was almost zero after administration in the free form, but was much greater after the dipeptide. Results of experiments on absorption and hydrolysis of the two peptides in the rat small intestine are also reported. It is suggested that whereas normal subjects absorb essential amino acids by a dual mechanism of mucosal uptake of free amino acids and oligopeptides, nutrition in Hartnup disease is largely dependent on uptake of oligopeptides containing the amino acids affected by the intestinal transport defect of the disease.

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Citations
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Amino acid transport across mammalian intestinal and renal epithelia.

TL;DR: The identification of most epithelial amino acid transporters over the past 15 years allows the definition of these disorders at the molecular level and provides a clear picture of the functional cooperation between transporter in the apical and basolateral membranes of mammalian epithelial cells.
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Integrated Upper Gastrointestinal Response to Food Intake

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Pharmaceutical and pharmacological importance of peptide transporters.

TL;DR: The aim of this review is to put the reports on peptide transporter‐mediated drug uptake into perspective and to review the current knowledge on pharmacogenomics and clinical relevance of human peptide transporters.
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Protein digestion and amino acid and peptide absorption.

TL;DR: It now appears certain that two major mechanisms are involved in the absorption of the luminal products of protein digestion: transport of liberated free amino acids by group specific active amino acid transport systems, and uptake of unhydrolysed peptides by mechanisms independent of the specific amino acid entry mechanisms.
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Protein digestion and absorption.

TL;DR: Conditionally essential amino acids are typically present, but in certain conditions may be deficient and an example is found in the disease phenylketonuria (PKU).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Absorption and malabsorption of glycine and glycine peptides in man.

TL;DR: The 'glycine tolerance test', an oral dose of glycine followed by analysis of peripheral blood samples, was first used for investigating amino acid absorp- tion more than 30 years ago by Heath and Fullerton, who concluded that the test gave 'no useful information regarding the rate of absorption from the gastrointestinal tract'.
Journal ArticleDOI

A specific micromethod for the colorimetric determination of glycine in blood and urine

TL;DR: A method for the measurement of glycine has been devised which involves its conversion by ninhydrin to formaldehyde; the latter is then measured by its reaction with chromotropic acid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hyper-beta-alaninemia associated with beta-aminoaciduria and gamma-aminobutyricaciduaia, somnolence and seizures.

TL;DR: Hyper-beta-alaninemia was found in a somnolent, convulsing infant and hyper- beta-aminoaciduria (beta-ala, betaAIB and taurine) was also observed, varying directly with plasma beta-alanine concentration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular mechanisms in intestinal transfer of amino acids.

H. Newey, +1 more
TL;DR: The use of peptides has value from another point of view, in that it provides a means of getting amino acids inside the epithelial cells without these amino acids having entered as such, and offers a possibility of studying cellular mechanisms for amino-acid transfer.
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