Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sulfites are usually added to food, beverages and pharmaceuticals as preservative antioxidants, bleaching agents, and dough conditioning agents. Ingestion of foods containing sulfites can cause abdominal pain, diarrhoea, seizures and death. Sulfite can react with cellular components and can cause toxicity. Changes in mucosal disaccharidases and phosphatase alkaline after sodium metabisulfite administration were investigated in the small intestine of rats. Female Wistar rats were given a diet supplemented with 0.25 or 2.5% sodium metabisulfite for 5 weeks. Sucrase, maltase, lactase and
alkaline phosphatase
were assayed in intestinal homogenates and in brush border membrane fractions. The intake of only 2.5% sulfite induced an increase in the specific activities of sucrase, maltase, and
alkaline phosphatase
compared to control levels (P < 0.05).
Lactase
levels were affected in a variable manner. The origin of such altered enzyme activities is still unknown.
...
PMID:Effect of sulfite intake on intestinal enzyme activity in rats. 795 44
The obese spontaneous hypertensive rat/NIH-corpulent (SHR/N-cp) rat exhibits some of the metabolic and pathologic alterations associated with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and hypertension. The current study was conducted to investigate the influence of phenotype (ob versus In) and source of dietary carbohydrate (sucrose versus starch) on intestinal sucrase, maltase, lactase, and
alkaline phosphatase
activity in SHR/N-cp rats. For 3 months, lean and obese male SHR/N-cp rats were fed isocaloric diets containing as the sole source of carbohydrate either 54% cooked corn starch or sucrose. Serum and urine markers for diabetes were observed in obese rats. Wet weight and length of intestines were significantly increased in obese rats compared with lean littermates. Among the intestinal enzymes measured, statistical tests confirmed that sucrase activity was significantly increased (P < 0.01) by both phenotype (ob > In) and feeding a sucrose diet. Diet alone (sucrose > starch) significantly increased (P < 0.05) maltase activity in obese rats, but had no effect on lean rats.
Lactase
activity was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in obese sucrose-fed rats compared with obese starch-fed and/or lean littermates. Statistical tests revealed that intestinal alkaline phosphatase activity was significantly altered (P < 0.05) by both phenotype and diet. Intestinal alkaline phosphatase was higher in starch-fed lean rats compared with lean littermates fed sucrose and to starch or sucrose-fed obese rats. These results are not indicative of a simple, nonspecific increase in intestinal enzyme activity, since the effects observed in intestinal alkaline phosphatase contrast the effects observed in intestinal sucrase, maltase, and lactase activity. These results indicate that both phenotype and diet alter structural and enzymatic intestinal activities of SHR/N-cp rats. Distinct variations in the observed intestinal enzymatic activities suggest that these enzymes are under the control of genetic, hormonal, and dietary factors. Rationale for these differences are discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of dietary carbohydrate and phenotype on sucrase, maltase, lactase, and alkaline phosphatase specific activity in SHR/N-cp rat. 843 90
Subchronic lindane (gamma-HCH) intoxication by oral or s.c. injection over 7 and 15 days, induced a significant inhibition in rat jejunum maltase activity when the pesticide was administered at doses of 20 mg/kg b. wt. However, maltase levels remained unaffected in those animals injected with 10 mg/kg of lindane. A longer period of s.c. lindane exposure (30 days) at doses of 10 mg/kg induced a significant decrease in maltase activity, although the injection of 20 mg/kg over the same period did not alter this enzyme activity. When this lindane dose was s.c. injected over 20 days a significant inhibition of maltase activity was observed. However no changes in this enzyme were found in rats injected over 25 days. This fact seems to suggest that between 20-25 days of pesticide exposure the organism develops possible regulatory mechanisms to counteract the alterations induced by this dose of lindane on maltase activity.
Lactase
and
alkaline phosphatase
activities were not altered by lindane action in different treatments performed. Sucrase activity was only altered in oral injected rats at doses of 20 mg/kg over 15 days. In conclusion, maltase activity seems to be more sensitive to lindane action than other brush border enzymatic proteins; lindane effects on this enzyme depend on the injected dose and the pesticide administration period duration.
...
PMID:Effects of different subchronic treatments with lindane on some brush border enzymes in rat jejunum. 877 84
The extent of positional variation in mucosal enzyme activity along the small intestine was investigated in 14-day-old suckling rats. Samples were taken from ten equally spaced sites along the intestine in 11 rat pups and the activities of the enzymes
alkaline phosphatase
, neutral aminopeptidase, gamma-glutamyl transferase, lactase and sucrase were measured. All the enzymes except sucrase were subject to considerable positional variation. Alkaline phosphatase and aminopeptidase activities were distributed throughout the intestine, with a broad maximum in the distal intestine.
Lactase
was also broadly distributed but with greatest activity in the mid intestine. gamma-glutamyl transferase exhibited a novel profile, with a very high proportion of the total activity (78%) present in the distal intestine. Sucrase was essentially absent throughout the intestine.
...
PMID:Longitudinal variation in the activities of mucosal enzymes in the small intestine of suckling rats. 879 8
The study concerns the maltase, saccharase, lactase and
alkaline phosphatase
activity in small intestinal biopsy specimens from 61 consecutively admitted, untreated, Caucasian cystic fibrosis patients. A group of 319 age matched controls admitted during the same time period for undefined gastrointestinal or nutritional disorders acted as the controls. In order to eliminate morphological damage as a confounding factor, the enzyme activities were studied in small intestinal biopsy specimens having both normal stereomicroscopic and histological features. It was shown that neither maltase nor saccharase activity was different in the two groups, in contrast to lactase and alkaline phophatase activity, that was significantly lower in cystic fibrosis patients. The differences could not be explained by the nutritional status as judged by the body mass index.
Lactase
activity is known to be easily affected by numerous enteropathies. As the information on
alkaline phosphatase
activity is limited, the low activity is discussed in more detail. Taking into account the literature data, the low
alkaline phosphatase
activity is tentatively attributed either to enhanced release from the brush border or to the faulty handling of alkaline phophatase protein in the post-golgi compartments secondary to the accumulation of incorrectly glycosylated CFTR in the same cell structures.
...
PMID:Small intestinal brush border enzymes in cystic fibrosis. 1054 91
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