Literature DB >> 6158999

The degradation of nucleic acids in, and the removal of breakdown products from the small intestines of steers.

A B McAllan.   

Abstract

1. Nucleic acids and breakdown products were estimated in digesta taken from different sites in the small intestines of slaughtered steers given different diets. Amounts passing different sites were compared using cellulose as a non-digestible marker. The validity of this marker was checked with chromic oxide in some experiments. In other experiments, nucleic acids or derivatives were infused into the proximal duodenum of steers receiving diets of approximately equal proportions of flaked maize and hay. The amounts disappearing during passage through the small intestine were estimated using polyethylene glycol (PEG) as a non-absorbable marker. 2. In the slaughter experiments the amounts of nucleic acids entering the small intestine varied with the type of diet. RNA and DNA disappeared on average, to extents of 89% and 80% respectively between the abomasum and the terminal ileum, irrespective of the diet. RNA disappearance occurred almost entirely in the proximal quarter of the small intestine, whereas that of DNA extended further along the tract. 3. Nucleic acid degradation in the upper small intestine was accompanied by the transient appearance of adenosine, guanosine and pyrimidine nucleosides. These products were in greatest concentration in digesta from the first quarter of the small intestine and had generally completely disappeared by the terminal ileum. 4. Of the different substances infused into the smnall intestine, free nucleic acids were removed to extents greater than 97%, adenine, guanine and uracil had completely disappreaed, thymine and xanthine to approximately 80% and 95% and hypoxanthine and cytosine to only 51% and 48% respectively. The nucleosides adenosine and cytidine were also completely removed in the small intestine but were replaced, in part, by the catabolic products inosine plus hypoxanthine or cytosine respectively. Other nucleosides were removed to approximately half the extent of the correspoonding bases. 5. Serum and urine allantoin and uric acid levels were related to the amounts of purines entering the small intestines in free or bound form.

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Year:  1980        PMID: 6158999     DOI: 10.1079/bjn19800014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Nutr        ISSN: 0007-1145            Impact factor:   3.718


  5 in total

1.  Nucleic acids digestion by enzymes in the stomach of snakehead (Channa argus) and banded grouper (Epinephelus awoara).

Authors:  Yu Liu; Yanfang Zhang; Wei Jiang; Jing Wang; Xiaoming Pan; Wei Wu; Minjie Cao; Ping Dong; Xingguo Liang
Journal:  Fish Physiol Biochem       Date:  2016-08-16       Impact factor: 2.794

2.  Digestibility and protein utilization in wethers fed whole-crop barley or grass silages harvested at different maturity stages, with or without protein supplementation1.

Authors:  Elisabet Nadeau; Dannylo Oliveira de Sousa; Anna Magnusson; Susanna Hedlund; Wolfram Richardt; Peder Nørgaard
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 3.159

3.  Ingested foreign (phage M13) DNA survives transiently in the gastrointestinal tract and enters the bloodstream of mice.

Authors:  R Schubbert; C Lettmann; W Doerfler
Journal:  Mol Gen Genet       Date:  1994-03

Review 4.  Biosafety and risk assessment framework for selectable marker genes in transgenic crop plants: a case of the science not supporting the politics.

Authors:  Koreen Ramessar; Ariadna Peremarti; Sonia Gómez-Galera; Shaista Naqvi; Marian Moralejo; Pilar Muñoz; Teresa Capell; Paul Christou
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2007-04-14       Impact factor: 3.145

5.  Digestion of Nucleic Acids Starts in the Stomach.

Authors:  Yu Liu; Yanfang Zhang; Ping Dong; Ran An; Changhu Xue; Yinlin Ge; Liangzhou Wei; Xingguo Liang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2015-07-14       Impact factor: 4.379

  5 in total

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