%0 Journal Article %T Transporter function and cyclic AMP turnover in normal colonic mucosa from patients with and without colorectal neoplasia %A Karen Kleberg %A Gerda Majgaard Jensen %A Dan Ploug Christensen %A Morten Lundh %A Lars Groth Grunnet %A Svend Knuhtsen %A Steen Seier Poulsen %A Mark Berner Hansen %A Niels Bindslev %J BMC Gastroenterology %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-230x-12-78 %X Cyclic nucleotides were used as model substrates shared by some OATP- and ABC-transporters, which in part are responsible for clearance of metabolites and xenobiotics from the colonic epithelium. On colonic biopsies from patients with and without colorectal neoplasia, molecular transport was electrophysiologically registered in Ussing-chamber set-ups, mRNA level of selected transporters was quantified by rt-PCR, and subcellular location of transporters was determined by immunohistochemistry.Of four cyclic nucleotides, dibuturyl-cAMP induced the largest short circuit current in both patient groups. The induced short circuit current was significantly lower in neoplasia-patients (p£¿=£¿0.024). The observed altered transport of dibuturyl-cAMP in neoplasia-patients could not be directly translated to an observed increased mRNA expression of OATP4A1 and OATP2B1 in neoplasia patients. All other examined transporters were expressed to similar extents in both patient groups.OATP1C1, OATP4A1, OATP4C1 seem to be involved in the excretory system of human colon. ABCC4 is likely to be involved from an endoplasmic-Golgi complex and basolateral location in goblet cells. ABCC5 might be directly involved in the turnover of intracellular cAMP at the basolateral membrane of columnar epithelial cells, while OATP2B1 is indirectly related to the excretory system. Colorectal neoplasia is associated with lower transport or sensitivity to cyclic nucleotides and increased expression of OATP2B1 and OATP4A1 transporters, known to transport PGE2. %K Cyclic-AMP compartmentalization %K Human colonic biopsy %K OATP- %K ABC- %K PGE2-transporters %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-230X/12/78/abstract