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)

Metronidazole (Flagyl), an antibiotic commonly used in treating intestinal infections, when administered orally at a dose level of 100 mg/kg body weight daily for 7 days to rats brought about a significant elevation of the uptake of end-product nutrients like D-glucose, L-alanine, L-aspartic acid and L-leucine in the intestinal segments. Brush border membrane-bound hydrolytic enzymes, i.e. sucrase, lactase, maltase, alkaline phosphatase and leucine aminopeptidase levels, were also elevated. Substrate kinetic analysis of the uptake of nutrients as well as the enzymes indicated that the drug increased the maximum of apparent initial velocity, while the substrate affinity constants did not change. Studies of the temperature-dependent parameters of the nutrient uptake and the enzyme activity revealed that metronidazole did not induce any shift in the transition temperature (T(o)) for the uptake but the energy of activation (Ea) was reduced in all the cases except those of maltase and leucine aminopeptidase, which registered an increase in Ea and a marginal shift in T(o), respectively. A significant elevation was seen in the levels of membrane cholesterol, phospholipid, ganglioside and plasmalogen in metronidazole-treated animals, while triglycerides and the non-esterified fatty acids remained unaffected. The effects produced by metronidazole treatment persisted in the animals, which were allowed a recovery period of 7 days after the drug regimen.
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PMID:Effect of the antiprotozoal agent metronidazole (Flagyl) on absorptive and digestive functions of the rat intestine. 147 60

Rotavirus enteritis is the leading cause of diarrhea in infants worldwide. A research priority of the World Health Organization is to develop oral rehydration solutions containing amino acids or other additives that will stimulate intestinal absorption more efficiently than the current glucose-based oral rehydration solutions. Glutamine is the principal metabolic fuel of the small bowel and a putative stimulator of mucosal repair. This report describes the transport response to mucosal L-glutamine following intestinal injury caused by porcine rotavirus. Peak symptoms and mucosal damage were observed 2-7 days after oral rotavirus inoculation. In vitro transport studies of the maximally injured region, the midjejunum (80% reduction in lactase), surprisingly, showed transport responses to L-glutamine (30 mmol/L) and L-alanine (30 mmol/L) that were similar qualitatively and quantitatively to those observed in control tissue. Subsequent application of mucosal D-glucose (30 mmol/L) caused additional stimulation of electrogenic Na+ transport, but the response to glucose was blunted (P less than 0.05) in the infected tissues. Glutamine and alanine enhanced Na+ absorption to a similar degree (2-2.5 muEq.cm-2.h-1), but glutamine stimulated equal amounts of electrogenic and electroneutral NaCl absorption, whereas alanine had no significant effect on net Cl- flux. Glutamine is a potentially useful substrate for investigation in oral rehydration solutions for infant diarrhea.
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PMID:L-glutamine stimulates jejunal sodium and chloride absorption in pig rotavirus enteritis. 188 9

1. The metabolic consequences of chronic ethanol feeding was investigated by assay of urinary metabolites. Male Wistar rats were fed a liquid diet containing 35% of total energy as ethanol or isovolumetric, isocaloric and isonitrogenous amounts of the same diet in which ethanol was substituted by isocaloric glucose (controls). 2. At 6 weeks the entire skeletal muscle mass was reduced by approximately 20%. The urinary excretion of nitrogen, urea and uric acid increased by between 23 and 128%. Urinary creatinine excretion was not significantly altered. 3. Urinary excretion of magnesium was significantly increased by 43%. Urinary excretion of sodium, potassium, calcium and phosphate was increased slightly (i.e. 5-22%), but this change was not statistically significant. 4. Proton n.m.r. spectroscopic analysis showed that ethanol feeding reduced the urinary excretion of citrate and 2-oxoglutarate (by approximately 50%), suggesting decreased citric acid cycle activity. There was an increased excretion of alanine (44%), but excretion of succinate and acetate was not significantly altered. Ethanol in the urine of ethanol-fed rats comprised approximately 2% of total ethanol intake and less than 1% of total energy intake. 5. Lactose was detectable in urine of ethanol-fed rats, but not in control rats, reflecting the reported decreased intestinal lactase activity and increased gut permeability in alcoholics. Urinary galactose excretion decreased by 41%, but relatively large increases in lactate excretion (50%) did not achieve statistical significance. 6. It was concluded that chronic ethanol feeding causes disturbances in whole-body nitrogen homoeostasis and alterations in intermediary metabolism.
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PMID:Urinary excretion of nitrogenous and non-nitrogenous compounds in the chronic ethanol-fed rat. 185 Oct 76

Oral administration of embelin (75 mg/kg per day, daily for 15 and 30 days) to male rats caused significant elevation in the uptake of D-glucose, L-alanine, L-leucine and calcium in small intestinal segments. Embelin also produced significant increases in intestinal brush border membrane-associated enzymes (sucrase, lactase, maltase, alkaline phosphatase and leucine aminopeptidase) in both intestinal homogenates and partially purified brush border membrane preparations. Significant increases were also noted for microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase and cytosolic lactate dehydrogenase. Increase in brush border membrane-associated total lipids, phospholipids, cholesterol, triacylglycerol, unesterified fatty acids and ganglioside sialic acid were seen but not in the cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio. All these changes returned to control or near control levels following withdrawal of the drug.
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PMID:Effects of embelin, a male antifertility agent, on absorptive and digestive functions of rat intestine. 192 15

Administration of Embelin, an experimental antifertility agent, to male rats (20 mg/kg body wt/day, daily for 15 and 30 days), caused an elevation in the uptake of D-glucose, L-alanine, L-leucine, and calcium in the small intestinal segments. An increase was also noted in the intestinal brush border membrane (BBM)-associated enzymes, sucrase, lactase, maltase, alkaline phosphatase, and leucine aminopeptidase in both the intestinal homogenates and partially purified BBM preparations, particularly after 30-day administration of the drug. Embelin treatment also caused a significant increase in the microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase and the cytosolic enzyme, lactate dehydrogenase. In the Embelin-treated animals BBM-associated total lipids, phospholipids, cholesterol, triacylglycerol, unesterified fatty acids, ganglioside-sialic acids as well as the cholesterol/phospholipids molar ratio showed a considerable increase. All these changes in the Embelin-treated animals were restored back to the normal or near normal biochemical makeup when the drug therapy was withdrawn and the animals were allowed to recover for another 15 and 30 days, respectively.
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PMID:Changes in glucose/amino acid/calcium uptake and brush-border membrane-associated enzymes in rat small intestine after the administration of embelin (plant benzoquinone), an antifertility agent. 211 47

The effects of Gossypol acetic acid (10 mg/kg b. wt. daily for 15 days), an experimental male antifertility agent and its subsequent withdrawal for another 15 days, on the structure and functions of the rat small intestinal tract have been investigated. Gossypol feeding causes a reduction in body weight and intestinal weight, length, protein, and nucleic acid contents. A 27%-50% reduction in the uptake of glucose, alanine, leucine, and calcium is observed after Gossypol feeding which is found to be reversible after 15 days of withdrawal of the drug. Gossypol also causes a significant reduction in the activities of sucrase, lactase, maltase and alkaline phosphatase in the intestinal homogenates as well as in the purified brush border membrane of the microvillus. A decrease in the maximum of apparent enzyme velocity and no change in the substrate affinity constant in these digestive hydrolases are observed on Gossypol treatment. It also causes a shift in the transition temperature in these enzymes and predictably changes the energy of activation both below and above the temperature of transition, although the Arrhenius expression of the temperature dependence still shows proximity, non-linearity, and is parallel to the control group. These changes are reversed on withdrawal of the drug and during the subsequent recovery period. Recovery experiments also show near identical values in kinetic parameters (Kt and Jmax) of 14C-glucose uptake in jejunal segments both in the presence and absence of Na+ ions. Also, no difference is observed between the control and recovery groups with respect to body and intestinal weight, intestinal length, and DNA, RNA, protein, lactate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase values in the intestinal homogenates. Phospholipid, cholesterol and sialic acid levels in both the groups also show nearly identical values. Molecular mechanism of the effects of Gossypol on brush border membrane-bound enzyme/carrier molecules operation is discussed in view of the kinetic and thermodynamic data obtained.
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PMID:Reversibility of the effects of gossypol acetic acid, an antispermatogenic/antifertility agent on the intestinal structure and functions of male albino rats. 274 9

Small intestinal explants from pre- and post-natal rats were incubated in an organ culture system in the absence and presence of epidermal growth factor (EGF). The rate of synthesis of small intestinal DNA and protein as well as the activity of lactase and alkaline phosphatase increased rapidly between 17 and 20-day gestational age, whereafter they declined. The maximal incorporation of 3H-thymidine and 14C-alanine into DNA and protein, respectively, was significantly stimulated by EGF (100 ng/ml). EGF had no effect on the activity of either lactase or alkaline phosphatase in the small intestinal explants.
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PMID:Effect of epidermal growth factor on growth and maturation of fetal and neonatal rat small intestine in organ culture. 309 92

Oral administration of Gossypol acetic acid (10 mg/kg body wt./day, daily for 15 days), an experimental antifertility agent to male rats, caused significant reduction in the uptake of glucose, alanine, leucine and calcium in the small intestinal segments. Gossypol also caused significant decrease in the intestinal brush border membrane--associated enzymes, sucrase, lactase, maltase and alkaline phosphatase. Kinetic analysis indicated that Gossypol decreased the apparent velocity of the disaccharidases while the Km was not altered. It also caused a shift in the transition temperature in these enzymes and predictably changed the energy of activation both below and above the transition temperature, although the Arrhenius expressions of the temperature dependence still showed proximity and were parallel to the control group.
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PMID:Effects of gossypol acetic acid on the absorptive and digestive functions of rat intestine. 324 43

We studied the postnatal development of bile acid transport in rat ileum, using brush border membrane vesicles prepared by a Ca2+ precipitation method. Membrane vesicles from developing (day 14-21) and adult Sprague-Dawley rats were enriched to a similar degree in brush border membrane marker enzyme activities (sucrase or lactase) compared with homogenate. Uptake of 25 microM [3H]taurocholate by adult membrane vesicles was markedly accelerated in the presence of an inwardly directed 100 mM Na+ gradient compared with a K+ gradient, and there was a transient intravesicular accumulation of isotope above equilibrium ("overshoot"). In contrast, at 14 and 16 days of age there was no difference in taurocholate uptake in the presence of a Na+ or a K+ gradient, and uptake was not saturable. The integrity of the vesicle preparation from 14- and 16-day-old rats was confirmed by the demonstration of Na+-dependent uphill transport of 100 microM L-[3H]alanine. Stimulation of taurocholate uptake by a Na+ compared with a K+ gradient ("sodium effect") was first observed at age 17 days, but an overshoot was not present until 18 days of age. The initial rate of Na+-dependent taurocholate (25 microM) uptake increased sixfold between 17 and 21 days of age (24.36 +/- 6.11 to 148.59 +/- 8.56 pmol X mg-1 protein X 5 s-1). Absent or decreased Na+-dependent taurocholate uptake was not due to increased permeability or "leakiness" of vesicles from younger animals to Na+. Ileal brush border membrane vesicles demonstrated saturable kinetics at 21 days, but the Vmax was significantly lower (10.15 +/- 0.44 vs. 13.42 +/- 0.59 nmol X mg-1 protein X min -1, p less than 0.001) and the apparent Km higher (130.6 +/- 18.9 vs. 70.1 +/- 12.6 microM, p less than 0.007) than the adult. We conclude that (a) saturable, Na+-bile acid coupled transport is absent in rat ileum throughout most of the suckling period and (b) kinetic analysis suggests that maturation occurs near weaning, primarily through an increase in functional bile acid carriers within the ileal brush border membrane.
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PMID:Ontogeny of bile acid transport in brush border membrane vesicles from rat ileum. 395 37

The activity of certain enzymes of the energy producing metabolism of the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial compartment and of disaccharidases was determined in jejunal biopsies of 24 chronic alcoholics (CA) and 10 non-alcoholic control subjects (C). The activity of glucokinase, an enzyme of glycolysis, was markedly (44%, p less than 0.05) increased in the biopsies obtained from CA, while the activity of fructose bisphosphatase, an enzyme of gluconeogenesis, was significantly (p less than 0.05) depressed in CA when compared to C. The activity of other glycolytic enzymes was not affected in CA. The activity of L-alanine amino-transferase was lower in CA (p less than 0.05). A reduction was also seen for mean succinate dehydrogenase activity in CA (-30%), however, this difference was not statistically significant. The mean activity of lactase, maltase and sucrase was comparable in both groups.
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PMID:Activities of cytoplasmic, mitochondrial and brush border enzymes in jejunal mucosa of chronic alcoholics. 628 1


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