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1.
J Exp Biol ; 218(Pt 17): 2666-9, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26113142

ABSTRACT

Glycosides are a major group of plant secondary compounds characterized by one or more sugars conjugated to a lipophilic, possibly toxic aglycone, which is released upon hydrolysis. We compared small intestinal homogenate hydrolysis activity of three rodent and two avian species against four substrates: amygdalin and sinigrin, two plant-derived glucosides, the sugar lactose, whose hydrolysis models some activity against flavonoid and isoflavonoid glucosides, and the disaccharide sugar maltose (from starch), used as a comparator. Three new findings extend our understanding of physiological processing of plant glucosides: (1) the capacity of passerine birds to hydrolyze plant glucosides seems relatively low, compared with rodents; (2) in this first test of vertebrates' enzymic capacity to hydrolyze glucosinolates, sinigrin hydrolytic capacity seems low; (3) in laboratory mice, hydrolytic activity against lactose resides on the enterocytes' apical membrane facing the intestinal lumen, but activity against amygdalin seems to reside inside enterocytes.


Subject(s)
Glucosides/metabolism , Glycoside Hydrolases/metabolism , Intestine, Small/metabolism , Murinae/metabolism , Passeriformes/metabolism , Amygdalin/metabolism , Animals , Enterocytes/metabolism , Glucosinolates/metabolism , Hydrolysis , Lactase-Phlorizin Hydrolase/metabolism , Lactose/metabolism , Maltose/metabolism , Species Specificity , beta-Glucosidase/metabolism
2.
J Exp Biol ; 213(5): 798-807, 2010 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20154196

ABSTRACT

It can be hypothesized that species with a wide or variable food niche are able to adjust their digestive physiology to current food type. In diet specialists, however, the capacity for such presumably costly plasticity is not necessary and flexibility of digestive physiology should be lower. Recently, we found that ontogenetic changes in the activity of digestive enzymes in house sparrow, a species that gradually consumes more carbohydrates during ontogeny, are strongly modified by diet composition. In the present study we examined digestive flexibility of nestling and adult zebra finches, typical diet specialists that consume only seeds after hatching. Both adult and nestling zebra finches could not thrive on a protein-rich and carbohydrate-free diet that supported normal development of young house sparrows. Mass-specific activity of intestinal carbohydrases (maltase and sucrase) was not elevated by higher diet carbohydrate content in both nestling and adult birds. Mass-specific activity of maltase changed less during ontogenetic development in zebra finch than in house sparrow. We conclude that the digestive physiology of zebra finch is adapted to process carbohydrate-rich food after hatching and is much less flexible than in house sparrow. We hypothesize that this difference might reflect the lack of a diet switch during ontogeny or result from high specialization to a narrow diet niche.


Subject(s)
Diet , Digestive System Physiological Phenomena , Ecological and Environmental Phenomena , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Finches/physiology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Body Weight/drug effects , Dietary Carbohydrates/pharmacology , Digestive System Physiological Phenomena/drug effects , Male , Nesting Behavior/drug effects , Organ Size/drug effects , Organ Specificity/drug effects , Survival Analysis
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