Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

In order to develop a calf model for studying the syndrome of ruminal drinking (RD) in veal calves, three dual-fistulated calves were used to test the effect of intraruminal administration of milk replacer on the jejunal mucosa. Biopsies of the proximal jejunal mucosa were taken through a jejunal fistula and the mucosal morphology and the activities of two brush border enzymes, lactase and alkaline phosphatase, were determined. Means of villus length and brush border enzyme activities decreased during the period of intraruminal administration of milk. The hyperplastic villus atrophy in this model was similar to that found in chronic RD patients in previous studies. This could not be associated with isolation of pathogenic micro-organisms from the faeces and is probably the consequence of the intraruminal milk feeding procedure itself. Clinical recovery from the signs of RD occurred rapidly after intraruminal administration of milk ceased and was followed by restoration of villus length and brush border enzyme activities 3-4 weeks later.
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PMID:Intraruminal administration of milk in the calf as a model for ruminal drinking: morphological and enzymatical changes in the jejunal mucosa. 216 Nov 40

Basement membranes have been implicated in morphogenesis and cell differentiation. In this study, the effect of basement membrane components on intestinal epithelial cell maturation in a mesenchyme-free environment was investigated. Fetal rat small intestinal epithelial cells (from the 14th-17th day of gestation) were exposed to basement membrane-derived proteins (laminin, collagen type IV, and a complex basement membrane-enriched extract from the Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm sarcoma) and other extracellular matrix proteins (collagen type I and fibronectin) coated onto Petri dishes. The cells attached readily only to fibronectin and basement membrane proteins. For 5 days the developing epithelial colonies were monitored in vitro, assessing morphological and functional parameters of cell maturation. Colonies grown on laminin and the basement membrane extract were larger and of greater cell density. An increase in alkaline phosphatase and lactase activity was observed after 3-4 days in these colonies which could be enhanced to yield 90%-100% positive cells by the addition of dexamethasone to the medium while no sucrase-isomaltase activity was elicited. Electron microscopy confirmed a high degree of cellular polarization illustrated by tight junctions and apical microvilli in epithelial cells grown on a basement membrane-like support. In contrast, none of the other proteins stimulated the cells to mature in vitro. The authors conclude that certain basement membrane components actively promote fetal intestinal epithelial cell differentiation.
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PMID:Basement membrane components are potent promoters of rat intestinal epithelial cell differentiation in vitro. 229 87

The dose relationship between medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA), a long acting contraceptive, and rat intestinal digestive and absorptive functions has been investigated. The study revealed that the activities of brush border sucrase, lactase and leucine aminopeptidase were stimulated only at high doses, viz 70 mg/kg (180 mumol/kg) body weight and above, whereas the activity of alkaline phosphate was depressed at comparatively low dose (17.5 mg/kg; 45 mumol/kg body weight). This decrease was found to be significant (p less than 0.001) at all the doses tested. The inhibition in the intestinal uptake of calcium paralleled the decrease in alkaline phosphatase activity. Relatively high amount of MPA (140 mg/kg; 360 mumol/kg) was required to augment the uptake of glucose and amino acid. The results obtained do not indicate a close relationship between the dose of the drug and the extent of alteration in the rat intestinal digestive and absorptive functions. The study appears to confirm the association between brush border enzymes activities and uptake of nutrients in rat intestine.
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PMID:Effect of various doses of medroxyprogesterone acetate on intestinal functions in rats. 230 1

The present studies were conducted to determine if diets containing a large amount of fat stimulate the regeneration of damaged intestinal mucosa in the presence or absence of essential fatty acid deficiency. To simulate injury, male Sprague-Dawley rats were given methotrexate, 2.5 mg/kg body wt, subcutaneously for 3 consecutive days. Twenty-four hours after the last methotrexate injection, rats were placed on diets containing either 0%, 1%, or 10% safflower oil. Mucosal weight, protein, deoxyribonucleic acid, maltase, sucrase, lactase, alkaline phosphatase, leucine aminopeptidase, and fatty acids were all determined 3 and 12 days after methotrexate. Crypt-cell production rates were also determined. Essential fatty acid deficiency was confirmed in the 0% safflower oil group, in which triene-tetraene ratios were greater than 0.4. Mucosal weight, deoxyribonucleic acid, protein content, and villus height were all greater in the 1% safflower oil group than in the 0% group at 12 days. In the ileum, 1-h thymidine incorporation was greater in the 0% safflower oil group than in the other two groups. No differences in any of the parameters studied were observed between the 1% and 10% groups. These results suggest that diets deficient in essential fatty acids may impair the recovery of intestinal mucosa from injury.
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PMID:Effects of dietary lipids on recovery from mucosal injury. 232 15

The effect of methylglyoxal on protein -SH and -NH2 groups in cytosolic and membranous fractions of epithelial cells lining the gastrointestinal tract of rat was investigated, using isolated villus and crypt cells (enterocytes) and colonocytes. It was found that 11-12% cytosolic protein -SH and 14-17% membrane protein -SH groups were lost when villus and crypt cells were treated with 2 mM methylglyoxal. In colonocytes, the corresponding loss in protein -SH groups was 46 and 30% under the same treatment. Similarly, 27-37% protein -NH2 group in the cytosolic fraction and 18-19% protein -NH2 group in membranous fractions of the enterocytes were lost by 2 mM methylglyoxal treatment. In colonocytes, the loss of protein -NH2 group was 30 and 15% in cytosolic and membranous fractions, respectively, under the same treatment. Effect of methylglyoxal on activity of various brush border enzymes such as alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, leucine aminopeptidase, Mg2(+)-ATPase, sucrase and lactase was also studied. Alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activities were inhibited to the extent of 30 and 15% respectively. There was no significant change in the activities of other enzymes after treating the brush border vesicles with 2 mM methylglyoxal. These findings show that methylglyoxal can cause loss of protein thiol and amino groups and enzyme activity in mucosal cells of rat gastrointestinal tract and the effect is more pronounced in colonocytes, which are in constant contact with bacterial metabolites.
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PMID:Effect of methylglyoxal on protein thiol and amino groups in isolated rat enterocytes and colonocytes and activity of various brush border enzymes. 234 Nov 60

Oral administration of cimetidine, an antiulcerogenic drug, at a dose of 100 mg per kg body weight in mice, caused significant inhibition of glucose and amino acid uptake in small intestinal segments either after 2 and 24 h (single treatment) or 15 days (daily). Cimetidine also caused a significant decrease in intestinal brush border membrane associated enzymes, sucrase, lactase, maltase and alkaline phosphatase, but increases the activity of leucine aminopeptidase. Kinetic analysis indicated that cimetidine decreased the maximum of apparent initial enzyme velocity (Vmax) of disaccharidases, while substrate affinity constant (Km) was not altered, indicating the noncompetitive nature of inhibition. However, the inhibition of alkaline phosphatase was found to be of mixed type as both Km and Vmax were altered. In vitro addition of cimetidine also produced significant inhibition of enzymes, the inhibition constant (Ki) for sucrase, lactase, maltase and alkaline phosphatase being 22.8, 4.5, 11.5 and 4.8 mM, respectively. It was further observed that in vitro addition of cimetidine also decreased Vmax in case of maltase, sucrase and lactase, Km was unchanged, whereas in case of alkaline phosphatase there was a decrease in Vmax and increase in Km, as compared to the controls.
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PMID:Effect of cimetidine on intestinal absorption & digestive functions in mice. 237 90

1. Intestinal structure, lactase (beta-galactosidase; EC 3.2.1.23) activity and alkaline phosphatase activity have been determined in mouse jejunal and ileal tissues before and during infection with the intestinal parasite Nematospiroides dubius. 2. Oral infection with small numbers of N. dubius larvae caused villus height, crypt depth and enterocyte migration rate to increase in the mouse jejunum. None of these effects occurred in ileal tissue. 3. Lactase activity also increased in jejunal, but not ileal, tissue of infected mice. This increase was associated with a doubling of the rate at which activity appeared in the brush-border membrane of enterocytes during migration over the basal regions of jejunal villi. Alkaline phosphatase activity in jejunal tissue remained unchanged in infected mice. 4. Attention is drawn to the fact that this is the first occasion when crypt cell hyperplasia has been found to be positively correlated with an increase in lactase activity and a decrease in cytotoxic/suppressor T-cells. Further work is needed to establish the primary cause of these effects.
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PMID:Intestinal infection with Nematospiroides dubius selectively increases lactase expression by mouse jejunal enterocytes. 250 31

110 children suffering from malabsorption underwent several biopsies of the gut to confirm coeliac disease (CD) following the ESPGAN criteria. We studied the values for alkaline phosphatase (AP) in the intestinal mucosa after gluten challenge. In 42 patients the after challenge biopsy was normal, thus excluding coeliac disease. In 68 children the mucosa was severely damaged confirming CD. In all biopsy specimens lactase, invertase, maltase and alkaline phosphatase were measured. We found a good correlation between PA values and severity of mucosal damage, showing that measurement of PA in the mucosa is helpful in assessing the degree of mucosal atrophy in children suffering from malabsorption.
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PMID:[Alkaline phosphatase in the intestinal mucosa of children with the malabsorption syndrome]. 250 30

To assess correlations between cellular differentiation and enzymatic maturation in the developing rat colon, tissue from fetal, suckling, weanling, and adult rats was analyzed by electron microscopy and assayed for lactase, alkaline phosphatase, and sodium-potassium-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase activities. The proximal and distal colon were analyzed independently at all ages. All three enzymes were detected in the fetal colon when the cells were highly undifferentiated. Postnatally, significant regional differences in cellular ultrastructure appeared, only some of which were directly paralleled by enzymatic changes. Each enzyme had a distinct region-specific developmental pattern. Lactase and sodium-potassium-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase were significantly enhanced at birth, decreasing to adult levels by 15 days postnatal. Regional differences were present, but the patterns were similar. These patterns did not parallel the increase in microvillar height and number and basolateral interdigitations of the surface columnar cells, the structural correlates of lactase, and sodium-potassium-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase, respectively. In contrast, developmental changes in alkaline phosphatase activity paralleled structural maturation, at least in part. The activity levels in the distal colon did not change significantly with age and few major structural changes were noted. In the proximal colon, activity increased markedly after birth, and after 10 days decreased rapidly to adult levels, a pattern that coincided with the transient appearance of villi and specialized cells with apical tubules and vesicles known to have alkaline phosphatase activity. The results show age- and region-related changes in cellular ultrastructure and enzymatic activities, only some of which appear to be directly correlated.
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PMID:Structural and enzymatic changes during colonic maturation in the fetal and suckling rat. 254 5

The activities of intestinal brush border membrane (BBM) enzymes alkaline phosphatase, maltase, lactase, sucrase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and leucine aminopeptidase were determined in intestinal homogenates and purified BBMs from control, heat-stable and heat-labile enterotoxin treated mice. The activities of all the enzymes except lactase were decreased significantly (p less than 0.01) in homogenates while increased significantly (p less than 0.001) in BBMs of experimental groups as compared to controls. Calmodulin activities were increased significantly (p less than 0.01) as compared to control in heat-stable enterotoxin treated mice but remained unaltered in heat-labile enterotoxin treated mice. DNA contents of intestinal homogenates were decreased in experimental groups demonstrating the decrease in cell number in these groups. The altered BBM enzyme activities could not be attributed to changes in calmodulin activities. The increase in enzyme activities in BBMs may reflect a compensatory phenomenon in the remaining cells.
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PMID:Effect of heat-stable and heat-labile enterotoxins of Escherichia coli on intestinal brush border membrane enzymes of mice. 257 May 78


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