Abstract
Tissues from rat and human alimentary tract were immunostained with rabbit antibodies to fatty acid-binding protein (FABP) isolated from rat liver, since the precise immunohistochemical localization of the protein in gut has not been determined. The results obtained indicated that FABP immunoreactivity was found almost exclusively in intestinal absorptive cells, the sole exception being its presence in the cytoplasm of a few goblet cells. In small bowel, FABP-positive cells were most often found in the upper and middle segments, and less frequently in the lower to terminal portion. Immunoreactive cells were also found in large bowel of rat and human, but with differing patterns of distribution. In rat, positive cells were found mainly in the lower portion of the large intestine, whereas in human positive cells were present in all portions. Immunoreactive cells were detected in rat and human cecum, in the upper half of human rectum, and in human vermiform appendix. No such cells were found in esophageal and nonmetaplastic gastric mucosa or in pancreatic tissue, whereas they were present in great numbers in metaplastic gastric mucosa. The results of this study therefore suggest that FABP is a useful marker for research into the physiology or pathology of absorptive cells in the gastrointestinal tracts of both species.