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Full Record
Identifier py0013
Creator Allen, Adrian
Title Gastroduodenal mucus bicarbonate barrier: protection against acid and pepsin /Adrian Allen and Gunnar Flemström
Contributor Flemström, Gunnar
File type html
Category
Review article
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Mode of Access
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Abstract
Secretion of bicarbonate into the adherent layer of mucus gel creates a pH gradient with a near-neutral pH at the epithelial surfaces in stomach and duodenum, providing the first line of mucosal protection against luminal acid. The continuous adherent mucus layer is also a barrier to luminal pepsin, thereby protecting the underlying mucosa from proteolytic digestion. In this article we review the present state of the gastroduodenal mucus bicarbonate barrier two decades after the first supporting experimental evidence appeared. The primary function of the adherent mucus gel layer is a structural one to create a stable, unstirred layer to support surface neutralization of acid and act as a protective physical barrier against luminal pepsin. Therefore, the emphasis on mucus in this review is on the form and role of the adherent mucus gel layer. The primary function of the mucosal bicarbonate secretion is to neutralize acid diffusing into the mucus gel layer and to be quantitatively sufficient to maintain a near-neutral pH at the mucus-mucosal surface interface. The emphasis on mucosal bicarbonate in this review is on the mechanisms and control of its secretion and the establishment of a surface pH gradient. Evidence suggests that under normal physiological conditions, the mucus bicarbonate barrier is sufficient for protection of the gastric mucosa against acid and pepsin and is even more so for the duodenum.
Series
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 288: C1-C19, 2005;
Subject
Acid-base transporters
Subject
Mucus secretions, Gels
Contributor
Department of Neuroscience, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Contributor
Medical School, University of Newcastle upon Tyne,
Identifier-URI
http://ajpcell.physiology.org/cgi/content/full/288/1/C1
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