Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This investigation deals with the histochemical, biochemical and electron microscopical development of the postnatal epithelium in the small intestine of guinea-pigs. Immediately after birth the enterocytes of the whole small intestine are rich in glycogen. Within 48 hours the glycogen in broken down by intralysosomal digestion and glycogenolysis or disappears from the villus epithelium by extrusion of the absorptive cells. The first loss of glycogen occurs in the jejunum; at the latest it leaves the lining epithelium of the ileum so that a proxoim-distal gradient exists. Afterwards for maximal 14 days fat ist taken up from the mother's milk only by the enterocytes of the jejunum without any signs of endocytosis; the bigger part of the fat leaves the cells by exocytosis and enters the intercellular space. Most of the lipid reaches the lymphatics or is absorbed by marcophages; only small amounts are found in the blood capillaries. The number of the enterocytes engaged in the absorption and passage of fat depends on its quantity in the lumen of the small intestine. During the first days of life everywhere in the small intestine the ultrastructure of the enterocytes is characterized by 2 types of mitochondria (large and small ones with different internal structure). Furthermore in the ileum the absorptive cells contain more lysosomes and a more extensive inframicrovillous membrane system than in jejunum. The membrane system consists of aggregated tubules, vacuoles and vesicles; they are situated below the microvilli and sometimes communicate with the lumen of the gut. The big mitochondria are broken down in the lysosomes or appear in the lumen of the small bowel following extrusion of the enterocytes. The lysosomes are involved in autophagic (digestion of glycogen and cell organelles) as well as in autophagic processes (hydrolysis of molecules from the mother's milk and foreign food). These substances are probably incorporated by means of the inframicrovillous membrane system. With respect to the microvillous hydrolases (lactase, alpha-D-glucosidases, peptidases, alkaline phosphatase) histochemical and biochemical assays were carried out with the same artificial substrate. The results depend on the method employed and the enzyme investigated. Using histochemical techniques and indolyl, naphthly, naphthol AS or naphthylamine derivatives as substrates the activity of peptidases and alkaline phosphatase correspond to that in adult guinea-pigs already at the time of birth; alpha-D-glucosidases (glucoamylase, saccharaseisomaltase) become mature at the end of the first, and the development of lactase is finished after the second week of life. For the biochemical investigations (fluorometric measurements of naphthol and naphthylamine) of microvillous enzymes with naphthyl and naphthylamine substrates a new technique of homogenisation using freeze-dried cryostate sections is successfully employed...
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PMID:[Postnatal development of the epithelium of the small intestine of guinea-pigs (author's transl)]. 21 41

A study has been made on the structure and chemical composition of the gut of Haemonchus contortus (Rud., 1803). The oesophagus has typically a triradiate, cuticle-lined lumen. The intestinal epithelium is provided with a well-developed brush border which contains periodic acid-Schiff-positive mucoproteins. The intestinal epithelium stores glycogen and lipids. It stains diffusely for phospholipids and general proteins and also for terminal-NH2 group. The presence of Fe2+ and Fe3+ containing pigments and activities of acid and alkaline phosphatases, glucose-6-phosphatase, and 5'-nucleotidase have been observed in the intestinal epithelium. Biochemically pH optimum for intestinal acid phosphatase has been found to be 4.8. The brush border shows positive reactions for acid phosphatase and glucose-6-phosphatase, and negative reactions for alkaline phosphatase and 5'-nucleotidase, and negative reactions for alkaline phosphatase and 5'-nucleotidase. The presence of enzymes in the brush border is related to extracellular digestion and absorption of nutrients.
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PMID:Morphological, histochemical, and biochemical studies on the gut of Haemonchus contortus Rud., 1803). 21 48

To study the reported decline in intestinal calcium absorption with age, calcium active transport, immunoreactive calcium protein (CaBP) content, and alkaline phosphatase activity were measured in the intestine of two strains of rats aged 3-wk--20 mo. Calcium active transport, as measured by everted gut sacs from Sprague-Dawley rats, was greatest at 3 wk, but it declined rapidly with no active transport demonstrable at 3 mo or thereafter. CaBP content closely paralleled the decline in active transport, but alkaline phosphatase activity increased as active transport decreased. Intestinal adaptation to dietary calcium was studied by feeding high- and low-calcium diets to Fischer 344 rats aged 1.5--12 mo. In 1.5-mo-old rats fed a low-calcium diet, there was an increase in calcium active transport, CaBP content, and alkaline phosphatase activity relative to animals fed a high-calcium diet. However, the magnitude of this intestinal adaptation decreased with age until there was only marginal adaptation by 12 mo. The observed changes in calcium active transport with age and diet may be explained by the parallel changes in the vitamin D-dependent CaBP content of the intestine.
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PMID:Effect of age on intestinal calcium absorption and adaptation to dietary calcium. 44 30

1. Self-filling blind loops of jejunum were constructed in three groups of rats; in the first, blind loops were created without further manipulation; in the second the bile was diverted permanently into the lower ileum below the blind loop, whereas in a third neomycin was added to the drinking water throughout the experiment. Two weeks after the creation of the blind loops, they were used for structural and functional studies. 2. Morphometric and microdissection techniques demonstrated that the surface area of the individual villi of the mucosa of 'ordinary' blind loops had increased fourfold in comparison with corresponding control jejunum, whereas the increase was only twofold in rats with bile diversion or in the series treated with neomycin. There were proportional increases in crypt length and mitotoic activity of the crypts in all three series, which suggest that the alterations in the mucosa were due to hyperplasia in both villus and crypt compartments. 3. Sucrase, succinate dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase and non-specific esterase activities, determined biochemically or histochemically, were reduced in the mucosae of all blind loops, though the changes were most pronounced in the 'ordinary' blind loops. The accumulation of L-phenylalanine by mucosal slices in vitro was depressed, although the decrease was less marked in the series treated with neomycin. 4. These results suggest that both bacteria and deconjugated bile acids play a role in the development of the hyperplastic changes of the blind-loop mucosa, but that another factor might also be involved: as a possible candidate, stasis of the intestinal contents was considered. 5. To test this hypothesis, loops of rat colon were transposed into the jejunum. Above the transposed loop, the jejunal mucosa developed hyperplasia of both villus and crypt compartments, with a reduction in its ability to accumulate L-phenylalanine. It is argued that these changes, probably caused by stasis of the intestinal contents, are triggered off by the dilatation of the gut, which may also be implicated in the mucosal alterations in blind loops.
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PMID:Structural and functional alterations in the mucosa of self-filling intestinal blind loops in rats. 47 94

A regional differentiation--reflecting structural differences--of the intestine of larval and juvenile grasscarps can be illustrated by studying the activity of alkaline phosphatase and the uptake of orally administered horseradish peroxidase. Pinocytosis takes place in a welldefined area of about 23% of the length of the gut (segment II). Neither the rostral +/- 68% (segment I) nor the caudal +/- 9% (segment III) shows absorption of the enzyme. Alkaline phosphatase activity, mainly localized at the microvilli of the enterocytes is high in the first segment of the gut and low in the second segment. In larvae, the activity decreases sharply at the transition from segment I to segment II. The activity is weak or absent in the caudal third segment. Quantitative histochemical data are confirmed by biochemical analyses. Alkaline phosphatase activity is found all over the mucosal folds of the first segment, with relatively weak activity at the base and at the tip of the folds. This may be related to a renewal of the epithelium. Our results suggest that active absorption of digested food takes place mainly in the rostral first segment, while the uptake of macromolecules by pinocytosis is a function of the second segment. Comparison of the results with information available in literature leads to a rejection of the hypothesis that the uptake of protein macromolecules in Cyprinids is to be attributed to the absence of a stomach and therefore to an inefficient digestion of proteins.
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PMID:REgional functional differentiation in the gut of the grasscarp, Ctenopharyngodon idella (Val.). 52 16

Shaven and unshaven rats were exposed to a cold stress at 4 degrees C for 6 hr (SE and UE). Control animals remained at room temperature (SC and UC). Hypothermia was induced in group SE, with mean rectal temperature of 22.0 +/- 2.0 degrees C (+/- S.E.M.). All other groups were normothermic, had similar arterial pO2 and hepatic tryptophan oxygenase levels. Acute hypothermia induced a sloughing of cells from the villi into the lumen of the gut, as indicated by an increased DNA in luminal washings. However, there was an unimpaired 3H-thymidine incorporation into the DNA of the intestinal mucosal cells and those present in lumina washes. Intestinal disaccharidases and alkaline phosphatase were not altered. This suggests that more severe cellular alterations reported earlier in hypothermia may have been caused by associated factors other than a decreased body temperature.
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PMID:Experimental acute hypothermia and intestinal cellular integrity. 67 37

A modified Roux-en-y repositioning of rat proximal small intestine resulted in a gut segment (A) exposed only to digestive secretions, but not to food and a gut segment (B) exposed to food, stomach juice and by reflux only to digestive secretions, and a third segment (C) exposed to both, food and digestive secretions. The changes in segment A were qualitatively very similar to those occurring after removal of luminal nutrition (intravenous feeding, self-emptying blind loop, and Thiry Vella loop). These findings support the hypothesis that the presence of luminal nutrition is a major factor regulating mucosal mass and enzyme activity in rat proximal small intestine. The changes in the luminal environment in segment B caused an increase in mucosal mass (in the proximal half only), an increase in sucrase activity which paralleled the increase in mucosal mass, and no change in activity of alkaline phosphatase which in fact was a decrease in activity ;at the cellular level'. Later on the net absorption of sodium and potassium was improved and the disappearance of galactose was unchanged when referred to unit length of small intestine.In segment C there was a small increase in mucosal mass, an increase in activity only for alkaline phosphatase, and an improvement of the net absorption of sodium without changes in the disappearance of galactose. These changes were compatible with a more proximal promotion of a distal gut segment.
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PMID:Analysis of the effects of food and of digestive secretions on the small intestine of the rat: III. Mucosal mass, activity of brush border enzymes, and in vivo absorption of galactose, sodium, and potassium. 68 Jun 2

Extracts of the calcinogenic plants Solanum malocoxylon and Cestrum diurnum stimulate phosphate absorption by the jejunum of vitamin D-deficient chicks, as determined by everted gut sac technique. Their action on cellular pathways of transepithelial phosphate transport is indistinguishable thereby from that of cholecalciferol. Increased net absorption from the lumen was due to enhanced uptake of phosphate from the luminal side, while leakage of tissue phosphate in the opposite direction was apparently unaffected. Steep serosa/mucosa concentration gradients were observed as consequence of enhanced levels of transepithelial phosphate flux in the mucosa-to-serosa direction. With respect to their stimulatory action on phosphate absorption, the calcinogenic plant factors retained their biological activity when phosphate transport was depressed by a high strontium diet. Their action in overcoming the strontium inhibition of phosphate absorption, calcium-binding protein synthesis, and alkaline phosphatase activity, was comparable to the effect of 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol. On the basis of these biological responses, the action of the plant factors from Solanum malacoxylon and Cestrum diurnum provides further evidence for their close resemblance to the hormonally active sterol.
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PMID:Stimulatory effect of 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol-like substances from Solanum malacoxylon and Cestrum diurnum on phosphate transport in chick jejunum. 70 9

Alkaline phosphatase isoenzymes have been studied by acrylamide gel disc electrophoresis in 76 patients with liver disorders comprising 15 with an extrahepatic lesion, 53 with an intrahepatic lesion, and eight patients who had features of both intra- and extrahepatic disease. No intestinal band was found in the 15 cases of extrahepatic liver disease, in marked contrast to the patients with intrahepatic lesions in whom an intestinal band was found in 45% of cases. The intrahepatic group was heterogeneous, a high incidence of intestinal bands being found in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. It is concluded that where a raised serum alkaline phosphatase is found in a patient with jaundice, and a gut band is present on electrophoresis, the lesion is likely to be intrahepatic.
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PMID:Intestinal alkaline phosphatase in the diagnosis of liver disease. 86 86

At an average of 32 days after a modified Roux-en-y repositioning of rat small intestine, the mucosal mass, mucosal composition, in vivo absorption of galactose and the activity of maltase, sucrase and alkaline phosphatase were measured. In the gut segment with digestive secretions but without food (A) the only change was a decrease of sucrase activity which occurred most probably at the cellular level. In the gut segment with food and gastric juice and a reflux of digestive secretions (B) complex changes took place. An increase in mucosal mass was not accompanied by an increase in galactose absorption. There was a high increase of sucrase activity, a moderate increase of maltase activity and a tendency of the alkaline phosphatase activity to decrease. The changes (increase in mucosal mass and total enzyme activity, but no changes in activity at the cellular level) in the segment exposed to both digestive secretions and food (C) were compatible with a more proximal promotion of a distal gut segment.
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PMID:An experimental model for studies on the effects of food and digestive secretions on the digestive-absorptive capacity of rat small intestine. 89 9


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