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)

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.
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PMID:Solubilization of brush borders of hamster small intestine and fractionation of some of the components. 113 70

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.
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PMID:Human small-intestinal beta-galactosidases. Separation and characterization of one lactase and one hetero beta-galactosidase. 582 67

Intestinal disaccharide uptake was studied with isolated brush-border membrane vesicles lacking the corresponding hydrolase. Either 15-day-old chick intestine, lacking both trehalase and lactase, or newborn pig intestine, lacking sucrase, was used. Both animal species yielded osmotically active vesicles capable of D-glucose/Na+ cotransport with a positive overshoot test. Vesicles from either origin gave quantitatively similar results in regard to both initial uptake rates and relative vesicle volumes. The nontransported analogs D-mannitol and L-glucose were used as diffusion markers. When tested with the appropriate disaccharidase-lacking vesicles, lactose, trehalose and sucrose exhibited uptake rates indistinguishable from those of D-mannitol and L-glucose. These uptakes were unaffected by the presence or absence of Na+, phlorizin and Tris. Chromatographic analysis confirmed the lack of hydrolysis of each disaccharide after prolonged incubation. The inescapable conclusion seems to be that intact disaccharides are not transported through the brush-border membrane, their uptake occurring through simple diffusion.
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PMID:Disaccharide uptake by brush-border membrane vesicles lacking the corresponding hydrolases. 643 45

To study the relation between dietary-induced increase of intestinal lactase activity and lactose absorption, 11-wk-old rats were fed either a high-starch (70 cal%), low-fat (7 cal%) diet or a low-starch (5 cal%), high-fat (73 cal%) diet for 7 days. Food intake and body weight changes were similar in the two dietary groups. In the first experiment, lactose absorption was studied in vivo after oral administration of 600 mg lactose (10% solution in water with added [3H]PEG) to rats fasted for 16 h. Groups of rats were killed at time 0 and at 1-h intervals for the next 3 h. Lactase activity and lactose absorption were significantly higher (P less than 0.01) in the high-starch group than in the low-starch group. In the subsequent experiment, 9-wk-old rats were fed the two isocaloric diets for 3 days. By use of the everted sac technique, we have demonstrated a significantly higher absorption of monosaccharides from lactose in the high-starch diet group; also, glucose transport was higher in the high-starch diet-fed animals. When Tris, an inhibitor of lactase, was added into the mucosal fluid, absorption of lactose was abolished and no effect was seen on glucose absorption (in vivo and in vitro). In both experiments, significant linear regression was established between lactase activity and lactose absorption. Our results thus show that the increase in lactase activity, induced by feeding a high-starch diet to adult rats, is accompanied by an increased capacity to hydrolyze lactose and absorb the constituent monosaccharides.
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PMID:Relation between dietary-induced increase of intestinal lactase activity and lactose digestion and absorption in adult rats. 643 52

The activities of various glycosidases in homogenates of the small intestinal mucosa of two adult and 18 suckling tammar wallabies (M. eugenii) aged from 6 to 50 weeks were investigated. Lactase (beta-D-galactosidase), beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, alpha-L-fucosidase and neuraminidase activities were high during the first 34 weeks post partum and then declined to very low levels. Maltase, isomaltase, sucrase and trehalase activities were very low or absent during the first 34 weeks, and then increased. The lactase activity was unusual in being greater in the distal than the middle or proximal thirds of the intestine, and in its low pH optimum (pH 4.6), inhibition by p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate but not by Tris, and lack of cellobiase activity. These properties are those of a lysosomal acid beta-galactosidase rather than of a brush border neutral lactase. The maltase activity had the characteristics of a lysosomal acid alpha-glucosidase early in lactation and of a brush border neutral maltase in adult animals. The significance of these findings is discussed in relation to changes in dietary carbohydrates during weaning and to the mode of digestion of milk carbohydrates by the pouch young.
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PMID:Intestinal lactase (beta-galactosidase) and other glycosidase activities in suckling and adult tammar wallabies (Macropus eugenii). 678 21

Intestinal glycohydrolases are enzymes involved in assimilating carbohydrate for nutrition. The avian forms of these enzymes, in particular the maltase-glucoamylase complex (MG), are not well characterised. This study encompassed characterisation of these enzymes from ostrich intestines, and the first kinetic analysis of an avian MG. Proteolytically solubilised MG from ileal brush border membrane vesicles was purified by Sephadex G-200 gel filtration and Tris-affinity-chromatography, while jejunal sucrase-isomaltase (SI) and MG were purified by Toyopearl-Q650 and phenyl-Sepharose chromatography. Amino acid sequences and compositions of enzyme subunits, resulting from SDS-PAGE, were determined. Kinetics of hydrolysis of linear oligosaccharides was studied. Ostrich MG and SI showed the highest activity in the jejunum, followed by the ileum and duodenum. No lactase or trehalase activity could be detected. The jejunal MG and SI, resulting from brush-border membrane vesicles, could not be separated during purification. However, a minor form of ileal MG was purified using Sephadex G-200 chromatography. Ileal MG contained three subunits of M(r) 145,000, 125,000 and 115,000. Although the N-terminal amino acid sequences bear no homology to SI, the M(r) 115,000 subunit shows homology to porcine MG in both sequence and amino acid composition. The pH optimum of maltose-, starch- and isomaltose-hydrolysing activity was 6.5 and that of sucrose-hydrolysing activity 5.5. The glycohydrolases were most active at 58 degrees C, but were quickly denatured above 60 degrees C. Sucrose- and starch-hydrolysing activities were more thermostable than maltose- and isomaltose-hydrolysing activities. Kinetic parameters (K(m), kcat and kcat/K(m)) for the hydrolysis of maltooligosaccharides, starch and glycogen are reported for ileal MG. Maltotriose and maltotetraose displayed partial inhibition of ileal MG. The study revealed large similarities between ostrich SI and MG in charge, size, shape and hydrophobicity, based on their inseparability by several methods. Measurement of the specificity constants for maltooligosaccharide hydrolysis by ileal MG revealed less efficient hydrolysis of longer substrates as compared to maltose and maltotriose.
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PMID:Ostrich intestinal glycohydrolases: distribution, purification and partial characterisation. 961 76

An important dietary source of vitamin B-6, pyridoxine-5'-beta-D-glucoside (PNG), exhibits only partial bioavailability, which is limited by the extent of enzymatic cleavage of the beta-glucosidic bond to release metabolically available pyridoxine (PN). This laboratory showed that the intestinal hydrolysis of PNG is catalyzed by cytosolic PNG hydrolase (PNGH) and brush border lactase-phlorizin hydrolase (LPH). LPH-catalyzed PNG hydrolysis in vitro is competitively inhibited by lactose. In the present study, the uptake and hydrolysis of PNG were examined in Caco-2 human colon carcinoma cells, which express a functional LPH but exhibit no PNGH activity. PNG uptake at 37 degrees C was linear over 5-500 micromol/L PNG. Uptake was not significantly reduced when Na(+) was substituted with K(+), Li(+), or Tris in the medium. Increasing PNG concentration in the medium did not change intracellular concentrations of PN, pyridoxamine (PM), pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate (PMP), or pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP); however, intracellular pyridoxal (PL) concentration increased. Intracellular PNG concentration was not significantly reduced in the presence of lactose, but the concentration of PL declined in proportion to extracellular lactose (P = 0.01). These results indicate that PNG can be absorbed intact in a Na(+)-independent process and is taken up by passive diffusion. The presence of lactose in this in vitro model of intestinal uptake reduced the enzymatic hydrolysis of PNG by lactase.
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PMID:Uptake, hydrolysis, and metabolism of pyridoxine-5'-beta-D-glucoside in Caco-2 cells. 1505 35