[No authors listed]
Allicin, an antioxidant from garlic, is known to regulate intestinal contractions, but its effect on intestinal ion transport is unclear. The aim of this study was to examine the role of allicin in the regulation of electrogenic ion transport in rat intestine by measuring the transmural potential difference (ÎPD). Allicin induced significant positive ÎPD, when administered to the serosal side of the colonic mucosal-submucosal preparation. Allicin-induced colonic ÎPD was largely diminished by incubation in the chloride-free solution, although the transient peak of ÎPD after application of allicin remained. This transient peak of ÎPD was significantly diminished in both the chloride- and the bicarbonate-free incubation solution. Induction of ÎPD by allicin was greatly diminished by AP-18, an inhibitor of the transient receptor potential (TRP) cation channel subfamily A member 1, TRPA1. Both alliin and S-allylcysteine, the analogues of allicin, had no effect on ÎPD and did not affect allicin-induced ÎPD in the colon. These results suggest that allicin mainly evokes the electrogenic chloride secretion and only partially increases the electrogenic bicarbonate secretion via TRPA1.
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