Illsley N P, Wootton R, Penfold P, Hall S, Duffy S
Placenta. 1986 May-Jun;7(3):209-20. doi: 10.1016/s0143-4004(86)80159-x.
The transfer of lactate across the human placenta was investigated using an in vitro dually-perfused placental preparation. Using a novel technique, the unidirectional flux of L-lactate was found to be linearly dependent on L-lactate concentration. In addition, unidirectional transfer rates were found to be the same in both maternal-to-fetal and fetal-to-maternal directions at the same lactate concentration. Transfer of [14C]L-lactate was decreased by approximately 15 per cent in competition with unlabelled L-lactate. Stereospecificity and permeability experiments demonstrated the existence of a transfer mechanism which could distinguish between the L- and D-isomers of lactate. Our data suggest that, while a stereospecific carrier for lactate exists in the perfused placenta, the bulk of transplacental lactate transfer takes place by non-carrier-mediated diffusion.