Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.2.1.108 (
lactase
)
2,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Brush borders were prepared from pig intestinal mucosa and the membrane proteins solubilized with either Triton X-100 or
papain
. Proteins, thus released, were used as antigens to raise antisera in rabbits. The immunoglobulin G fractions were isolated and shown by the double layer immunofluorescence staining technique to react only with the brush border region of the enterocyte. The antibodies obtained were used in immunoelectrophoretic studies on the brush border proteins. Eight hydrolytic activities were identified by the use of histo-chemical staining methods. These were the microsomal aminopeptidase (EC 3.4.11.2), aspartate aminopeptidase (EC 3.4.11.7), dipeptidyl peptidase IV (EC 3.4.14.X),
lactase
(EC 3.2.1.23), glucoamylase (EC 3.2.1.3), sucrase (EC 3.2.1.48), isomaltase (EC 3.2.1.10) and alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1). In addition, at least four faint immunoprecipitates were formed but none of these were identified.
...
PMID:Immunoelectrophoretic studies on pig intestinal brush border proteins. 2 Sep 74
Lactase and maltase, the predominant sugar hydrolases associated with the intestinal brush bordermembrane of the suckling rat, were purified essentially free of the other to near homogeneity (
lactase
at specific activity 23, maltase at specific activity 58), and their specific physiocochemical properties determined. Antisera prepared to each showed by immunodiffusion a single common precipitin line with pure enzyme and solubilized proteins of the brush border membrane. Brush border membranes were purified 26--35-fold from infant rat intestine. Membranes prepared from 10-day-old rats contained 32% protein, 43% lipid and 25% carbohydrate with
lactase
and maltase estimated to comprise in excess of 10% and 2%, respectively, of the membrane protein. Immunotitration curves of
lactase
and maltase showed equivalent antibody binding by the membrane-bound and free enzyme forms. Furthermore, antibody binding to one enzyme did not affect the immunotitration curve or the extractability (by
papain
or Triton X-100) of the other membrane-bound enzyme. It was concluded that the
lactase
and maltase molecules are attached singly on the external membrane surface in a spatially independent manner with their antigenic sites as freely available to antibody binding as exhibited by their
papain
-solubilized counterparts.
...
PMID:Sugar hydrolases of the infant rat intestine and their arrangement of the brush border membrane. 11 Mar 47
The arrangement of the sugar hydrolases, sucrase-isomaltase, maltase, and
lactase
on the microvillus membrane of rat intestine was investigated by immunological technique. The enzymes were purified essentially free of each other to near homogeneity and antisera of high specificity were obtained against each. Microvillus membranes were prepared routinely in high purity from rat intestine and contained an average 61% protein, 20% lipid, and 19% carbohydrate, with the sugar hydrolases comprising an estimated 20--25% of the membrane protein. The immunoreactivity of membrane-bound sucrase-isomaltase, maltase, and
lactase
was investigated with antisera demostrating specific reactivity to each, when tested in the presence of other membrane extractives. The membrane-bound enzymes were found in each case to combine with antibody in amounts equivalent to that required to effect precipitation of comparable units of the free enzymes from solution. Preloading membrane vesicles with antibodies to any two of the enzymes did not affect either the immunoreactivity or extractability (by
papain
or Triton X-100) of the third. The antibody-binding studies indicated an arrangement of these enzymes independent of each other on the membrane surface, in a manner allowing each to maintain a high degree of molecular freedom.
...
PMID:Sugar hydrolases and their arrangement on the rat intestinal microvillus membrane. 11 6
About 90% of the protein of hamster intestinal brush borders was solubilised in 0.25% (w/v) sodium dodecyl sulphate without total loss of biological activity. Detergent-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the solubilised proteins separated 10-15 bands and partially resolved maltase,
lactase
, sucrase-maltase, trehalase and alkaline phosphatase activities. The disaccharidases, which were associated with the higher molecular weight proteins, were preferentially solubilised with 0.1%. (w/v) Triton X-100, butanol or
papain
, whereas Tris and NaI extracted only the lower molecular weight proteins, possible derived from the core filaments. Electrophoresis of brush border proteins metabolically labelled with [14-C] glucosamine suggested that many of the membrane-bound enzymes are glycoproteins. However, chromatography of a
papain
digest on Sephadex G-200 showed that the sucrase-maltase complex can be separated nearly free of carbohydrate without total loss of activity. The importance of characterizing membrane proteins solubilised by a number of techniques is discussed.
...
PMID:Solubilization of brush borders of hamster small intestine and fractionation of some of the components. 113 70
The releases of proteins, maltase,
lactase
, sucrase, trehalase, alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyltransferase and leucylnaphthylamide-hydrolyzing activity from human intestinal brush bborder membrane vesicles by various enzymes (especially pancreatic proteases) have been studied. The brush border membrane enzymes are not solubilized by digestion with trypsin and chymotrypsin but are largely released after treatment with
papain
or elastase. Most of the enzymes are fully active after the proteolytic treatment. All proteins released by
papain
and elastase have been identified by electrophoresis to already known intestinal hydrolases. Electron microscopy of brush border membrane vesicles demonstrates "knob-like" structures (particles) attached to the external side of the membrane. During
papain
treatment, enzyme removal runs parallel with the disappearance of the particles. During elastase treatment it is not possible to correlate the release of the enzymic activities with the removal of the particles. The results indicate that most of the intestinal hydrolases are surface components attached to the external side of the membrane. They are in accord with the concept that the brush border membrane enzymes are organized within the membrane in a mosaic-like pattern.
...
PMID:Enzymic solubilization of the human intestinal brush border membrane enzymes. 127 90
A rapid and improved method to obtain purified
lactase
from rat intestine is described. The purification procedure involved only two chromatographic steps. The degree of purification was far above (500 fold) the values reached with classical methods. Rabbit antisera raised to the purified
lactase
were characterized using conventional immunological techniques. The specificity of the
lactase
antibodies was confirmed by the lack of interference on maltase, aminopeptidase and alkaline phosphatase activities measured after
papain
extraction of the membrane proteins.
...
PMID:Improved purification of rat intestinal lactase. 309 77
Human
lactase
purified from detergent extracts of the total membrane fraction of postmortem jejunum by means of monoclonal immunoadsorbent chromatography appears to be a dimer of subunits identical in Mr (160K). Trypsin or
papain
removes a small hydrophobic anchoring peptide from each subunit to give a hydrophilic enzyme which no longer interacts with detergent micelles. Lactase hydrolyzes, besides lactose, cellobiose and the synthetic substrates, 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-galactoside and beta-glucoside, as well as phlorizin; but it does not hydrolyze glucocerebroside. Phlorizin hydrolase is associated with
lactase
under all conditions investigated; coincident staining on immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis, coincident elution on immunoadsorbent chromatography and on gel filtration in a dissociating buffer, and correlated reduction in activity in
lactase
-nonpersistent individuals. Adult and infant lactases are indistinguishable by titration or immunodiffusion against polyclonal rabbit antibodies. Adult individuals low in
lactase
activity also show a corresponding reduction in cross-reacting material. These observations suggest that
lactase
persistence is due to the continued synthesis of the infant enzyme.
...
PMID:Human lactase and the molecular basis of lactase persistence. 392 64
1. Two beta-galactosidases from human small-intestinal mucosa were separated by gel-filtration chromatography and the properties of the two enzymes were studied. Lactose and four hetero beta-galactosides were used as substrates. 2. One of the enzymes was particle-bound and could be partially solubilized with
papain
. Of the substrates hydrolysed by this enzyme, lactose was hydrolysed most rapidly. This enzyme is thus essentially a disaccharidase and is named
lactase
. It is presumably identical with the ;
lactase
1' described earlier. 3. The other enzyme was mainly soluble and hydrolysed all artificial substrates used, whereas no
lactase
activity could be detected. This enzyme has therefore been designated hetero beta-galactosidase. 4. p-Chloromercuribenzoate (0.1mm) inhibited the hetero beta-galactosidase completely but did not influence the activity of the
lactase
. Tris was a competitive inhibitor of both enzymes. 5. The residual
lactase
activity in the mucosa of lactose-intolerant patients may be exerted by a small amount of remaining
lactase
as such, or possibly by a third enzyme with a more acid pH optimum.
...
PMID:Human small-intestinal beta-galactosidases. Separation and characterization of one lactase and one hetero beta-galactosidase. 582 67
Comparisons between
papain
- and Triton X-100-solubilized
lactase
(EC 3.2.1.23) were made in terms of elution from various chromatographic columns and by molecular weight determinations. Using these techniques, no major differences could be detected. Since
papain
-solubilized enzyme would be cleaved at the hydrophilic-hydrophobic interface and detergent would release the amphipathic enzyme, the lack of detectable differences between purified
lactase
solubilized by the two agents suggests the existence of a relatively small anchoring moiety in rats when compared to that suggested in previous studies for adult humans.
...
PMID:Comparison of detergent versus protease solubilized rat intestinal lactase. 643 55
Lactase exists in both soluble and membrane-bound forms in suckling rat intestine. The distribution of
lactase
and its glycosylated isoforms in response to thyroxine or cortisone administration has been studied in suckling rats. 75% of
lactase
activity was detected, associated with brush borders, compared to 24% in the soluble fraction of 8-day-old rats. Thyroxine treatment enhanced soluble
lactase
activity to 34%, whereas particulate fraction was reduced to 67% compared to controls. Cortisone administration reduced soluble
lactase
activity from 24% in controls to 12% with a concomitant increase in membrane-bound activity to 89%. Western blot analysis revealed
lactase
signal, corresponding to 220 kDa in both the soluble and membrane fractions, which corroborated the enzyme activity data. The elution pattern of
papain
solubilized
lactase
from agarose-Wheat Germ agglutinin, or Concanavalin A or Jacalin agglutinin columns was different in the suckling and adult rat intestines. Also the elution profile of
lactase
activity from agarose-lectin columns was modulated in cortisone, thyroxine, and insulin injected pups, which suggests differences in glycosylated isoforms of
lactase
under these conditions. These findings suggest the role of these hormones in inducing changes in
lactase
glycosylation during postnatal development of intestine, which may contribute to adult-type hypolactasia in rats.
...
PMID:Hormone induced changes in lactase glycosylation in developing rat intestine. 1871 86
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