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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)
Lactose
-absorption capacity was examined in 275 apparently healthy Polish adolescents and adults (214 females and 61 males with an average age of 29.1 years) using a field version of the lactose-tolerance test with breath hydrogen determination. In the total group, 172 lactose absorbers (62.5%) and 103 lactose malabsorbers (37.5%) were identified. Reported milk intolerance and symptoms of lactose intolerance were significantly more frequent in lactose malabsorbers. Subdivision according to the birthplaces of the probands' grandparents did not reveal significant regional differences. The unexpectedly high frequency of lactose malabsorption is further evidence for concentric genetic clines of
lactase
gene frequencies extending from southern Scandinavia, the area with the lowest observed frequencies of selective adult hypolactasia, to the south and the east.
...
PMID:Prevalence of primary adult lactose malabsorption in Poland. 646 37
To test the hypothesis that in subjects with low intestinal
lactase
activity (LLA) lactose solutions leaves the stomach at an abnormally fast rate, we have measured the gastric emptying rate of solutions of lactose and glucose-galactose in patients with LLA (n = 9) and in control subjects with high intestinal
lactase
levels (n = 7) as proved by the assay of disaccharidases in specimens of intestinal mucosa. The volume of the test meals was 300 ml.
Lactose
solutions contain 50 g of disaccharide and glucose-galactose solutions contain 25 g of each monosaccharide. The volumes remaining in the stomach at different times after the intragastric instillation of the test meals were estimated by the double sampling test meal. In the control group, minor differences between lactose and glucose-galactose gastric emptying rates was found. By contrast, in LLA patients, the lactose meal left the stomach at a significantly faster rate than the glucose-galactose test meal. These findings support previous evidence obtained in patients with putatively low intestinal
lactase
activity and are consistent with the view that duodenal osmoreceptors, whose excitation results in inhibition of gastric emptying, lie deeper than the disaccharidases in intestinal mucosa. Thus, incomplete hydrolysis of lactose results in a faster than normal gastric emptying rate of the sugar and this may contribute to the symptoms found in LLA patients after milk ingestion.
...
PMID:Gastric emptying of lactose and glucose-galactose in patients with low intestinal lactase activity. 662 55
Lactose
tolerance tests with conventional blood glucose determination and with breath hydrogen analysis after storage of breath samples in aluminium aerosol cans were simultaneously performed in 60 healthy adult subjects. Both tests were equally reliable in the diagnosis of the
lactase
phenotype in healthy persons. In subjects with decreased glucose metabolism the breath hydrogen test seems to be more reliable than the blood glucose test. Provisions for storing breath samples for up to several weeks, avoidance of invasive procedures and insensitivity of glucose absorbed during the test make the present version of the lactose tolerance test with breath hydrogen determination particularly suitable for population studies.
...
PMID:Population screening for the human adult lactase phenotypes with a multiple breath version of the breath hydrogen test. 678 75
Regulation of lactose (beta-D-galactosidase) synthesis in the lactose-utilizing yeast Candida pseudotropicalis was studied. The enzyme was inducible by lactose and galactose. When grown on these sugars the enzyme level of the yeast was 20 times or higher than when grown on glycerol. The Km and optimal pH were similar for the
lactase
induced either by lactose or galactose. The hydrolysis of o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside by the
lactase
was inhibited by galactose and several analogs and galactosides, but not by glucose.
Lactose
uptake activity observed in lactose-grown cells was very reduced in cells grown on glucose or galactose. Glucose repressed the induction of
lactase
, but not the metabolic system for galactose utilization. In continuous culture on lactose medium at dilution rates below 0.2 h-1 the specific
lactase
activity was higher than in batch cultures and decreased with increases in dilution rate. Lactase was induced by pulses of lactose and galactose in cells growing on glucose, but only at low dilution rates were the steady-state concentration of glucose was very low.
...
PMID:Regulation of beta-D-galactosidase synthesis in Candida pseudotropicalis. 680 Mar 4
Lactose
absorption was studied in 570 health adolescent and adult males in Egypt. Employing a field version of the noninvasive hydrogen breath test, 156 (27.4%) lactose absorbers and 414 (72.6%) lactose malabsorbers were identified. The age-specific prevalence of the lactose phenotypes indicated that
lactase
repression is complete at the age of 14 years in Egyptians. The regional distribution showed significant differences between the Nile Delta and the northern and southern part of Upper Egypt. The existence of a north-south gradient of decreasing frequencies of the hypolactasia gene from the Nile Delta to the Sudan is suggested.
...
PMID:Distribution of human adult lactose phenotypes in Egypt. 680 27
Lactose
tolerance tests with breath hydrogen determination were performed on 585 apparently healthy adolescents and adults in the Democratic Republic of the Sudan. Out of the total, 303 probands belong to the tribal group Beja, traditional nomadic pastoralists in the desert zone between the Nile and the Red Sea. The 282 Nilotes (mainly Dinka) are members of seminomadic cattle breeding tribes in the south of the Sudan. In both populations milk consumption is substantial but only in the Beja true milk dependence, sufficient to result in selective pressures in favour of the
lactase
persistence allele, is likely to exist. The proportion of lactose malabsorbers was 16.8% in the Beja and 74.5% in the Nilotes. The high prevalence of lactose malabsorption among the Nilotes fits into a converging gradient of
lactase
gene frequencies along the Nile Valley. The Beja are the first nomadic desert population in North Africa in whom a high prevalence of
lactase
persistence has been demonstrated on a numerically sufficient sample.
...
PMID:Beja and Nilotes: nomadic pastoralist groups in the Sudan with opposite distributions of the adult lactase phenotypes. 681 Jul 4
Lactose
breath hydrogen tests were given to 70 children and adolescents with chronic ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease in order to determine the prevalence of lactose malabsorption in childhood inflammatory bowel disease. Twenty-nine percent of these patients demonstrated lactose malabsorption; the majority of these children (70%) experienced gastro-intestinal symptoms during the test. The prevalence was not significantly different whether the diagnosis was ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. With the exception of those with diffuse small bowel disease, the location of intestinal involvement with Crohn's disease and the severity of clinical symptoms did not affect lactose malabsorption. Lactose malabsorption was not more frequent in patients with inflammatory bowel disease than in a group of children with recurrent abdominal pain and normal gastrointestinal x-rays, although significant differences in the prevalence of lactose malabsorption were observed in relation to ethnic background. Milk incubated with commercially available yeast
lactase
(lactAid, Surgarlo Co., Atlantic City, N.J.) for greater than 24 h prevented an increase in breath hydrogen when administered to 6 patients previously shown to have lactose malabsorption.
...
PMID:Lactose malabsorption in children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease. 689 2
Newborn rats born to iron deficient mothers (IDM) were found to have significantly lower hemoglobin, sucrase,
lactase
and maltase levels compared to control newborn rats. Rats born to IDM and nursed by IDM, when sacrificed at 21 days of age, had statistically significantly lower hemoglobin, serum iron, sucrase,
lactase
and maltase levels compared to control rats. Rats born to IDM, but nursed by iron sufficient mothers (ISM) and sacrificed at 21 days of age, had hemoglobin, serum iron and sucrase levels compared to control rats whereas
lactase
and maltase were not corrected by 21 days of nursing by ISM. Rats burn to IDM and nursed by either IDM or ISM for 21 days were given intramuscular iron dextran and placed on iron sufficient diet (ISD) for 7 days. These animals experienced correction of the hemoglobin, serum iron, sucrase and maltase levels compared to control rats, whereas intestinal
lactase
was not corrected by 7 days of ISD and intramuscular iron. Rats born to ISM, nursed by IDM and sacrificed on day 21 had significantly lower hemoglobin, serum iron and intestinal
lactase
levels compared to control rats. Rats both to ISM and nursed by IDM were given intramuscular iron dextran on day 21 and placed on an ISD from day 21-28. These animals had a return in hemoglobin, serum iron, sucrase and maltase levels comparable to control rats. Rats born to and nursed by ISM and maintained on an iron deficient diet from day 21-84 had significantly lower hemoglobin, serum iron, sucrase,
lactase
and maltase levels compared to control rats. Rats born to and nursed by ISM, maintained on iron deficient diet from day 21-84, and then given intramuscular iron dextran on day 84 and maintained on an ISD until day 92, experienced correction of the hemoglobin, serum iron and
lactase
levels compared to control rats. Intramuscular iron and 7 days of ISD did not correct the sucrase and maltase levels in these rats.
Lactose
tolerance tests in iron deficient rats showed flat curves compared to controls. After iron treatment, lactose tolerance curves returned to control values. Iron deficiency in rats in utero, during the nursing and postweaning period causes, in addition to anemia, a reduction in jejunal disaccharidase activity because of an alteration in the enzymes of the brush border membrane. Varying degrees of reduction and response of certain disaccharidases to iron treatment are dependent on the time of iron deprivation in relationship to the intra-uterine and postnatal development of the digestive and absorptive functions in the small intestine. Alterations in the levels of disaccharidases demonstrated in this paper represents another aspect of the spectrum of biochemical effects of iron deficiency.
...
PMID:Disaccharidase levels in iron deficient rats at birth and during the nursing and postweaning periods: response to iron treatment. 707 2
Using breath hydrogen analysis after 139 mmol (50 g) oral lactose load, we investigated the prevalence of lactose malabsorption in 200 Greek adults and examined the relationship between symptoms and small bowel transit time. One hundred and fifty subjects had increased breath hydrogen concentrations (greater than 20 ppm) after the lactose load. In these individuals peak breath hydrogen concentration was inversely related to small bowel transit time (r = 0.63, 6 = 6.854, p less than 0.001) and the severity of symptoms decreased with increasing small bowel transit time.
Lactose
malabsorbers with diarrhoea during the lactose tolerance test had a small bowel transit time of 51 +/- 22 minutes (x +/- SD; n = 90) which was significantly shorter than the small bowel transit time of patients with colicky pain, flatulence, and abdominal distension (74 +/- 30, n = 53; p less than 0.001) and both groups had significantly shorter small bowel transit time than that of asymptomatic malabsorbers (115 +/- 21 n:7; p less than 0.001). When the oral lactose load was reduced to 33 mmol (12 g), the small bowel transit time increased five-fold and the overall incidence of diarrhoea and/or symptoms decreased dramatically. These results indicate that the prevalence of
lactase
deficiency in Greece may be as high as 75% and suggest that symptom production in lactose malabsorbers is brought about by the rapid passage down the small intestine of the malabsorbed lactose.
...
PMID:Lactose malabsorption in Greek adults: correlation of small bowel transit time with the severity of lactose intolerance. 712 6
Lactose
in yogurt is better absorbed by
lactase
-deficient subjects than is an equivalent quantity of lactose in milk, presumably because of the microbial activity of the beta-galactosidase present in yogurt. In this study, we describe a process that increases the beta-galactosidase of yogurt 5- to 6-fold and the ability of this high
lactase
yogurt to enhance lactose absorption in
lactase
-deficient subjects. These subjects ingested the yogurt meals after a 12-h fast, and lactose malabsorption was determined by measuring breath hydrogen. Breath hydrogen was reduced 39% following ingestion of high
lactase
yogurt from that after consumption of conventional yogurt, indicating that the high
lactase
yogurt enhanced lactose absorption. However, the reduction after high
lactase
yogurt was less than expected, given the 5- to 6-fold increment in beta-galactosidase measured in vitro. In vivo activity of beta-galactosidase requires that the enzyme resist acid denaturation in the stomach. The beta-galactosidase in high
lactase
yogurt was much less acid resistant than was the beta-galactosidase in conventional yogurt, and the relative inability of high
lactase
yogurt to enhance lactose absorption was likely due to the destruction of the beta-galactosidase in the stomach.
...
PMID:Factors affecting the ability of a high beta-galactosidase yogurt to enhance lactose absorption. 769 33
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