Crustacean Intestinal Detergent Promotes Sterol Solubilization
- 26 September 1975
- journal article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 189 (4208), 1098-1100
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1162360
Abstract
Although crustacean tissue cholesterol content is high, Crustacea, like other arthropods; are incapable of cholesterol synthesis, and presumably are dependent for maintaining tissue cholesterol stores on the intestinal absorption of ingested sterol. A detergent, N-(N-dodecanoylsarcosyl)taurine, representative of a set of detergents synthesized by the crustacean hepatopancreas and secreted into the intestine, is capable of efficient cholesterol solubilization, and thus of promoting sterol absorption.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biliary excretion of lecithin and cholesterol in the dogJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1972
- Unstirred Water Layers in Intestine: Rate Determinant of Fatty Acid Absorption from Micellar SolutionsScience, 1971
- Biliary lipid secretion and bile composition after acute and chronic interruption of the enterohepatic circulation in the rhesus monkeyJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1971
- In Vivo Conversion of Cholesterol to Steroid Hormones in the Spiny Lobster, Panulirus japonicaNIPPON SUISAN GAKKAISHI, 1971
- Digestive Enzymes of the American Lobster (Homarus americanus)Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1970
- The physicochemical basis of cholesterol gallstone formation in manJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1968
- Ionic crystal surfacesCanadian Journal of Chemistry, 1967
- Absence of Sterol Synthesis in some ArthropodsNature, 1964
- Emulgators in the digestive fluids of invertebratesArchives Internationales de Physiologie et de Biochimie, 1962
- Ueber das Verhalten der fettsauren Alkalien und der Seifen in Gegenwart von Wasser. III. Die Seifen als KrystalloïdeEuropean Journal of Inorganic Chemistry, 1895