Abstract: | The activation of trypsinogen to trypsin in the small intestine can occur by the action of enterokinase or, alternatively, as an autocatalytic process catalysed by trypsin itself. We have found that bile salts and human bile cause a significant enhancement of the autocatalytic activation of trypsinogen. This effect is dependent on the calcium ion concentration and is most marked around pH 5.4 and 7.8. An optimum concentration exists for each bile salt at which the greatest enhancement occurs. At this concentration, certain bile salts have been shown to produce activation effects of up to 55-fold. It is suggested that this activation of the autocatalytic process by bile plays an important role in protein digestion in the small intestine, since it has been shown previously that duodenal trypsin levels are abnormally low in patients with an impairment of bile secretion. |