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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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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)
Laboratory rats were fed experimental diets including yogurt, pasteurized yogurt, and simulated yogurt with sucrose or lactose for 7 days followed by a single experimental meal of yogurt, pasteurized yogurt, or simulated yogurt. Assays of blood
galactose
demonstrated that animals fed natural yogurt containing the viable culture microflora were able to absorb
galactose
more efficiently. Intestinal
lactase
activity of yogurt-fed animals was greater than in animals fed other experimental diets including pasteurized yogurt. Gastrointestinal survival of culture organisms was demonstrated in vivo up to 3 h after feeding, and thus, the viable cells resulted in more efficient hydrolysis which favored lactose digestion in natural yogurt.
...
PMID:Influence of viable yogurt microflora on digestion of lactose by the rat. 0 80
Six and twelve hours after a single i.p. dose of cyclophosphamide (100 mg/kg body weight) the activity of different "brush border enzymes" (maltase, sucrase
lactase
, alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyl transferase) and of a lysosomal enzyme (acid phosphatase) did not change. In vivo absorption of
galactose
was not diminished by the treatment. The pattern of response to cyclophosphamide seems to be different in SPF and GF rats. The response of crypt epithelium (cell number, mitotic number, mitotic frequency) was more pronounced in the SPF rats, whereas the villus height only decreased in the GF rats.
...
PMID:Morphology and enzyme aktivity in rat small intestinal epithelium 6 and 12 hrs. after an alkylating agent (cyclophosphamide). 1 Jul 11
Interactions of lipids and proteins in isolated rat intestinal microvillus membranes were examined by studying the temperature dependence of enzyme activities and of
D-glucose
transport in relation to the membrane lipid thermotropic transition observed by fluorescence polarization (26 +/- 2 degrees C) and differential scanning calorimetry (23--39 degrees C). Two groups of activities were defined. Enzymes of the first group, comprising
lactase
, maltase, sucrase, leucine aminopeptidase, and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, all yielded a single slope on the Arrhenius plot in the range 10--40 degrees C and did not appear to experience functionally the effects of the lipid thermotropic transition. Each activity of the second group, comprising calcium- and magnesium-dependent adenosine triphosphatases, p-nitrophenylphosphatase, and
D-glucose
transport, showed a change in the slope of the Arrhenius plot in the range 25--30 degrees C, corresponding to the lower region of the lipid transition. The terms "extrinsic" and "intrinsic" activities could be applied to these groups. Delipidation of the particulate p-nitrophenylphosphatase removed the discontinuity in the Arrhenius plot. Subsequent relipidation with a variety of lipids restored a break point, but the temperature corresponded to the original discontinuity (25--29 degrees C) rather than to the phase transition temperature of the exogenous lipid added.
...
PMID:Functional interactions of lipids and proteins in rat intestinal microvillus membranes. 3 92
The suitability of the simultaneous azocoupling reaction with 1-naphthyl-beta-D-
glucoside
and hexazonium-p-rosanilin in the detection of the activity of
lactase
(or
lactase
-beta-glucosidase complex) in jejunal biopsies of patients with various forms of the malabsorption syndrome was tested. Results were compared with those obtained with the indigogenic method using 4-Cl-5-Br-3-indolyl-beta-D-fucoside which is the method of choice. Both methods gave identical results as far as the relative intensity of the brush border staining was concerned. The azocoupling method applied in unfixed cold microtome sections can be recommended for the routine diagnostics of the malabsorption syndrome when the indolyl substrate is not available.
...
PMID:Suitability of the azocoupling reaction with 1-naphthyl-beta-D-glucoside for the histochemical demonstration of lactase (lactase-beta-glucosidase complex) in human enterobiopsies. 5 35
A method for the histochemical demonstration of "hetero-beta-galactosidase" was elaborated. The enzyme is demonstrated in cryostat sections by the semipermeable membrane technique. Pairs of membranes--one pre-washed in saline--are used. The most sensitive method is post-coupling demonstration with 6-Br-2-naphthyl-beta-D-
glucoside
. The incubation time must be short, to avoid diffusion. The method allows cellular localization. The method with alpha-naphthyl-beta-D-
glucoside
and hexazonium-p-rosaniline is less sensitive, but localization is better. Indigogenic methods are the least sensitive. The enzyme is localized in the supranuclear zone of differentiated enterocytes of the human, monkey and rabbit small intestine, with maximum activity in the jejunum. The activity of the enzyme is low in patients with coeliac sprue, in the active phase of the disease. In isolated
lactase
deficiency it is normal. In the kidney, the enzyme is localized chiefly in the cytoplasm of the proximal tubule cells.
...
PMID:Demonstration of "hetero-beta-galactosidase" "in situ". 9 37
A considerable increase occurs in
D-glucose
uptake and brush border sucrase and
lactase
activities in the intestine of monkeys treated with a single oral dose of DDT. Brush border alkaline phosphatase activity remains unaffected in the pesticide treated animals. In vitro addiction of DDT has no effect on the sugar absorption and disaccharidase activities.
...
PMID:Effects of DDT (chlorophenotane) administration on glucose uptake and brush border enzymes in monkey intestine. 9 80
General evidence of malnutrition such as loss in body weight associated with intestinal parasitism has been attributed to decreased food intake, to intestinal malabsorption, and to change in host basal metabolism. To establish the relative importance of these factors in this regard, rats with trichinosis were studied. The weights of infected and uninfected animals were followed after being placed on one of three feeding regimens for 1 week--stock diet ad libitum, intraduodenal nutrition, and intravenous nutrition. Infected rats on a stock diet lost weight whereas those on the other two regimens maintained the same weight pattern as uninfected counterparts. The maintainance of body weight occurred despite alterations at the level of the intestinal brush border as indicated by a depression of intestinal disaccharidase activities (sucrase and
lactase
) and by reduction of monosaccharide absorption (measured as accumulation of beta-methyl
glucoside
) in the proximal, heavily infected region of the small intestine. There was no compensatory increase in enzyme activity nor in the absorptive capacity in the distal gut. Results support the conclusion that inadequate oral food intake rather than changes in basal metabolism or intestinal pathophysiology accounts for weight loss during the intestinal phase of infection.
...
PMID:Enteral and parenteral feeding to evaluate malabsorption in intestinal parasitism. 11 Jan 62
The relationship between changes in intestinal
lactase
activity and monosaccharide uptake was studied in rats of different ages using the technique of intestinal everted sacs. In the postweaning period there is a sharp decrease in the rate of glucose and
galactose
uptake by the small intestinal mucosa. This change occurs simultaneously with a decrease in
lactase
activity in the tissue. The kinetic analysis showed a lower Vmax for monosaccharide uptake in the 50-days-old rats as compared with the fifteen-days-old animals, with no change in the apparent Kt. The addition of Tris+ (40 mM) to the incubation media was found to produce a decrease in Vmax for monosaccharide uptake only in the suckling rats but not in the 50-days-old animals; the K1 remained unchanged. Tris+, at the concentration used had previously been shown to completely inhibit
lactase
activity in homogenates of small intestinal mucosa. These observations lead us to postulate the
lactase
in the suckling rat might possess a translocating role for sugar, in addition to its hydrolytic function. The decrease in sugar uptake after weaning could be explained by the disappearance of this role.
...
PMID:Relationship between changes in lactase activity and monosaccharide uptake in the small intestine of the rat during development. 12 82
1. Lactose 6'-O-sulphate, N-acetylneuraminyl-(alpha 2 leads to 3)-D-lactose 6'-O-sulphate, N-acetylneuraminyl ?-O-sulphate-(alpha 2 leads to 3)-D-lactose 6'0-O-sulphate, N-acetylneuraminyl ?-O-sulphate-(alpha 2 leads to 6)-D-lactose and N-acetylneuraminyl-(alpha 2 leads to 3)- and -(alpha 2 leads to 6))-lactose 6'-O-sulphate were prepared by chemical sulphation of lactose, N-acetylneuraminyl-lactose and tis isomers by using pyridine-SO3 reagent. 2. Significant kinetic differences were observed in the enzymic hydrolysis of the sulphated derivatives compared with unsubstituted substrates. 3. In the case of reactions catalysed by rat liver lysosomal and Clostridium perfringens neuraminidases (EC 3.2.1.18), the presence of an O-sulphate group in the N-acetylneuraminyl moiety affected the reaction by decreasing the Km and the Vmax, its presence in the galactosyl moiety affected the reaction by decreasing the Km and increasing the Vmax. and its presence in both N-acetylneuraminyl and galactosyl moieties decreased the Km and the Vmax. of the reaction. 4. Mixed-substrate reaction kinetic data indicated competition between the sulphated and unsubstituted substrates for the same active sites on the neuraminidase molecule. 5. Lactose 6'-O-sulphate neither behaved as a substrate nor acted as an inhibitor with respect to unsubstituted lactose and p-nitrophenyl beta-D-
galactopyranoside
when tested with
lactase
of suckling rat intestine and Escherichia coli beta-D-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23). 6. Preliminary investigation also indicated that, whereas glucose 6-O-sulphate and glucose 3-O-sulphate were were neither substrate nor inhibitor of glucose oxidase (EC 1.1.3.4),
galactose
6-O-sulphate was oxidized half as fast as unsubstituted
galactose
by
galactose
dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.48).
...
PMID:Effect of O-sulphate groups in lactose and N-acetylneuraminyl-lactose on their enzymic hydrolysis. 22 64
Two studies were conducted to establish the effects of dietary lactose supplied from dried whey on the
lactase
activity in the contents of the small intestine and cecum as well as the mucosa of the small intestine. In the first study, feeding 0, 10, 25, or 40% dried whey for 120 days did not alter the mucosal
lactase
specific activity (mumoles
galactose
released/mg protein) in the duodenum, upper jejunum, or lower ileum. In the second study, total
lactase
activity in the small intestine was estimated from the total activity found in 10-cm segments of each meter of small intestine. Feeding a diet containing 40% whey continuously from weaning at 5 weeks of age or from 12 weeks of age did not alter the total
lactase
activity of pigs killed at 21 weeks of age. Dietary lactose tended to increase the
lactase
activity in the contents of the cecum and small intestine, but the increases were not always statistically significant. In the second study, Chester White pigs had approximately threefold greater mucosal
lactase
activities than that of Hampshires. These two breeds may be suitable models for detailed studies into the relationships between
lactase
deficiency and lactose intolerance.
...
PMID:Effects of diets containing dried whey on the lactase activity of the small intestinal mucosa and the contents of the small intestine and cecum of the pig. 23 67
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