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Query: EC:3.1.3.8 (phytase)
1,997 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Some cereal by-products, such as bran, exhibit a high phytase activity that may enhance phytate P digestibility. This was studied in growing pigs fed a phytase-rich (1,200 IU/kg) diet containing 20% rye bran. The trial involved 12 animals; six were fed a control diet and six were fed a diet containing rye bran for 2 mo. Both diets contained the same levels of energy, protein, Ca (.7%) and total P (.4%). No inorganic P was added; thus, the dietary P was mainly phytic. Pigs fed the control diet, in contrast to those fed the diet containing rye bran, developed a P deficiency, as indicated by hypophosphatemia, hypophosphaturia, hyperhydroxyprolinuria, hypercalcemia, and hypercalciuria. Phosphorus from the rye bran diet was more completely absorbed (55 vs 36%) and retained (50 vs 36%) than that from the control diet. Calcium absorption was equal for the two diets, but Ca retention was higher in pigs fed rye bran than in controls. Pigs fed the rye bran diet showed greater bone density, ash content, and bending moments than controls. In conclusion, high dietary phytase levels or phytase-rich by-products increased phytate P availability and consequently improved bone scores.
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PMID:Enhancement of phosphorus utilization in growing pigs fed phytate-rich diets by using rye bran. 164 62

Phytate is one of the major inhibiting factor for zinc and iron absorption. When phytate is hydrolyzed during the food process the mineral availability is increased. By activation of the endogenous enzyme phytase which is present in plant foods, or addition of phytase, phytate is degraded to various inositolphosphates containing 1-5 phosphate groups per an inositol molecule. The effects of degradation products of phytate on availability of zinc, calcium and iron have to be further investigated. Food processes including soaking, germination and fermentation were under optimal conditions demonstrated to completely reduce the phytate content of cereals and vegetables. The results were related to in vitro measurements of iron availability and human iron and zinc absorption studies.
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PMID:The effect of food processing on phytate hydrolysis and availability of iron and zinc. 165 32

Inositol compounds with three to five phosphate groups (IP3-IP5) were produced by hydrolysis of phytate (inositol hexaphosphate, IP6) and their binding affinities for calcium and zinc investigated at neutral pH with relative concentrations that had been found in a range of students' meals. Zn solubility was negligible at many of these concentrations, with less Zn bound to precipitates of Ca-IP6 than Ca-IP5. The capacity to precipitate Zn at these ratios fell between IP5 and IP3. Zn was partially desorbed by soluble chelators (histidine and picolinate), especially when it had been adsorbed to preformed Ca-IP precipitates. A lower proportion of Zn was accessible to soluble chelators from Ca-IP4 than the other compounds. IP3-IP4 were hydrolysed by phytase more readily than IP5-IP6.
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PMID:Binding of zinc and calcium to inositol phosphates (phytate) in vitro. 240 Jul 62

In contrast to corn, wheat and triticale exhibit high phytase activities. This enzyme enhances phytic phosphorus availability, as demonstrated in pigs given wheat diets. To study the utilization of triticale phosphorus in pigs, the importance of dietary phytase content and the mineral and bone disorders related to high phytate feeding, a nutritional experiment was carried out in 12 growing pigs fed either a corn- or a triticale-based diet for 6 wk. The diets were almost identical except for the cereal component; their phosphorus contents were low (0.4%) and mainly phytic. The following parameters were measured: calcium and phosphorus balances, bone and plasma contents of calcium and phosphorus, plasma vitamin D metabolites and parathyroid hormone (PTH), bone bending moments and intestinal phosphatase activities. Both diets provoked a phosphorus deficiency, but hypophosphatemia occurred less rapidly, hypercalciuria and hypophosphaturia were less marked and phosphorus availability was greater when the triticale diet was fed. This was attributed to the high phytase content of triticale because intestinal phytase and alkaline phosphatase activities were similar in pigs fed either diet. Calcium absorption was not modified by calcium retention was greater for pigs fed triticale and led to higher bone scores. In conclusion, the higher the phytase activity of the diet, the greater the phytate P availability and the lower the bone-mineral disorders.
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PMID:Importance of cereal phytase activity for phytate phosphorus utilization by growing pigs fed diets containing triticale or corn. 303 49

A culture enrichment technique was used to isolate phytase-producing microorganisms. Also, microorganisms from various culture collections were tested for their phytase-producing ability. A number of the Aspergillus niger group produced extracellular phytase which dephosphorylated calcium phytate in acidic solution. A soil isolate, A. ficuum NRRL 3135, produced the most active phytase in a cornstarch-based medium. Production of phytase was strongly repressed by inorganic phosphates and required a high carbon to phosphorus ratio in the medium.
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PMID:Survey of microorganism for the production of extracellular phytase. 430 Jan 71

Two types of extracellular acid phosphatases are synthesized by Aspergillus ficuum NRRL 3135: a nonspecific orthophosphoric monoester phosphohydrolase (EC 3.1.3.2) with an optimum pH of 2.0, and an enzyme with restricted specificity, a mesoinositol-hexaphosphate phosphohydrolase (EC 3.1.3.8; phytase) with an optimum pH of 5.5. Although the pH 5.5 enzyme is termed a phytase, both enzymes hydrolyze phytin. Synthesis of the enzymes is repressed by high orthophosphate concentrations in the fermentation medium. The highest total level for each enzyme is synthesized in low orthophosphate medium. In high orthophosphate medium, more pH 5.5 enzyme is produced than pH 2.0 enzyme. In low orthophosphate medium, more pH 5.5 enzyme is produced than pH 2.0 enzyme during the early stages of growth, but the reverse occurs after 5 days. The enzymes are differentiated by heat denaturation at acid and alkaline pH levels. They are separated into two distinct fractions on Sephadex G-100 followed by carboxymethylcellulose column chromatography. This indicates that the two enzymes are structurally different. The K(m) for both enzymes is 1.25 mm when calcium phytate is the substrate. Orthophosphate competitively inhibits the pH 2.0 (K(i) = 1.1 x 10(-2)m) but not the pH 5.5 phosphatase. Neither enzyme is denatured by 50% (w/v) urea or inhibited by 0.01 m tartrate. Thus, they differ from human prostatic phosphatase.
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PMID:Regulation of the formation of acid phosphatases by inorganic phosphate in Aspergillus ficuum. 431 67

Some properties of phytase from cotton plant seeds were studied. The phytase activity was shown to increase during seed germination. The enzyme from cotton sprouts is not activated by Ca2+, Mg2+ and K+ and has the pH optimum of 5,0 and temperature optimum of 50 degrees. The molecular weight of the enzyme as determined by gel-filtration is 36000.
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PMID:[Some properties of cotton plant phytase]. 626 70

An enzyme which liberates Pi from myo-inositol hexaphosphate (phytic acid) was shown to be present in culture filtrates of Bacillus subtilis. It was purified until it was homogeneous by ultracentrifugation, but it still showed two isozymes on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme differed from other previously known phytases in its metal requirement and in its specificity for phytate. It had a specific requirement for Ca2+ for its activity. The enzyme hydrolyzed only phytate and had no action on other phosphate esters tested. This B. subtilis phytase is the only known phytate-specific phosphatase. The products of hydrolysis of phytate by this enzyme were Pi and myo-inositol monophosphate. The enzyme showed optimum activity at pH 7.5. It was inhibited by Ba2+, Sr2+, Hg2+, Cd2+, and borate. Its activity was unaffected by urea, diisopropylfluorophosphate, arsenate, fluoride, mercaptoethanol, trypsin, papain, and elastase.
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PMID:Purification and properties of phytate-specific phosphatase from Bacillus subtilis. 628 90

1. The effects of phosphorus deprivation on phytate digestibility, phosphorus utilization and intestinal phytase (EC 3.1.3.8) and alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1) in rats were investigated. 2. P deprivation was achieved by giving rats a diet containing 3 g P/kg and resulted in hypophosphataemia, hypercalcaemia, hypercalciuria, and lower levels of P absorbed and retained, and calcium retained. 3. Rats adapted to P deprivation by increasing the digestion of total dietary-P and phytate-P. 4. Levels of intestinal alkaline phosphatase and alkaline phytase were not different between the two treatment groups. 5. P deprivation in the rats given the marginal-P diet may be a result of a lower absorption of total dietary-P or increased absorption of inositol phosphates formed during the enzymatic hydrolysis of phytate which are not readily utilized by the rat. 6. These results suggest that intestinal phytase and alkaline phosphatase do not play a role in the adaptive increase in phytate digestibility by rats given marginal-P diets. The adaptation may result from enhanced phytase or alkaline phosphatase synthesis by the gastrointestinal microflora stimulated by a lower level of P in the digesta.
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PMID:Adaptive increase in phytate digestibility by phosphorus-deprived rats and the relationship of intestinal phytase (EC 3.1.3.8) and alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1) to phytate utilization. 629 37

The effects of dietary phosphorus and sulphaguanidine levels, and sex differences on: (a) phytate digestibility, (b) calcium and P utilization, (c) the activities of alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1), alkaline phytase (EC 3.1.3.8) and acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.2) in the intestinal mucosa of male and female rats were investigated. There was a linear increase in femur ash, Ca and P contents and the maximum force withstood by the fresh femurs as dietary P level was increased from 1.5 to 3.0 to 4.5 g/kg diet. The apparent digestibilities of Ca, P and phytate-P decreased as the level of P in the diet increased. Rats given the diets with 1.5 or 3.0 g P/kg were hypercalciuric and hypophosphaturic compared with rats receiving 4.5 g P/kg diet. The level of Ca retained was similar for all treatments. The level of P retained increased as the dietary P level increased. This suggests that P deprivation was a result of inadequate amounts of P retained and not due to the absorption of inositol phosphates formed during the enzymic hydrolysis of phytate. The addition of sulphaguanidine increased phytate digestibility without changing the activities of acid and alkaline phosphatase or alkaline phytase of the intestinal mucosa. This suggests that these enzymes did not play a role in the increase in phytate digestibility. However, dietary sulphaguanidine enhanced phytate digestibility, suggesting that alterations in the diet which modify either the composition or metabolism of the gastrointestinal microflora may be beneficial in enhancing the in vivo hydrolysis of phytate. Differences between males and females are reported and discussed.
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PMID:Influence of dietary phosphorus and sulphaguanidine levels on P utilization in rats. 632 99


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