Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.108 (lactase)
2,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Enterocytes are the major epithelial cell type of the small intestine. Their capacity to secret, absorb and digest specific ions and nutrients is dependent on their position along the length of the small intestine as well as their stage of development as they migrate and differentiate along the crypt-villus axis. In order to further understand the molecular processes that regulate enterocyte differentiation and function, this study has compared the levels of six mRNA species produced by genes expressed in rabbit enterocytes; specifically, the multidrug resistance (MDR1) gene encoding the 170-kDa P-glycoprotein, CaBP 9k, which encodes a putative intracellular calcium buffer, calbindin, LPH, APN, and AP which encode the brush-border hydrolases lactase-phlorizin hydrolase, aminopeptidase N and alkaline phosphatase, respectively, and SGLT1, encoding the brush border Na(+)-glucose cotransporter. The level of each mRNA species has been mapped along the small intestine using quantitative in situ hybridisation. This has revealed characteristic regional variations in the abundance of each of the mRNAs, supporting the opinion that there is a strong genetic component to the maintenance of gradients in epithelial function along the length of the small intestine. Analysis of the cellular accumulation of mRNA during enterocyte migration along the crypt-villus axis, over gut-associated lymphoid tissue, and at epithelial boundaries, has, by contrast, established a clear correlation in the expression of these genes. These data illustrate the dynamics of enterocyte gene expression, thereby providing an insight into the molecular mechanisms which co-ordinate the events of cell transformation that underlie functional differences between the epithelial populations of the small intestine.
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PMID:Parallel patterns of cell-specific gene expression during enterocyte differentiation and maturation in the small intestine of the rabbit. 758 2

During pregnancy and lactation, prolactin (PRL) enhances intestinal absorption of calcium and other minerals for fetal development and milk production. Although an enhanced absorptive efficiency is believed to mainly result from the upregulation of mineral transporters in the absorptive villous cells, some other possibilities, such as PRL-enhanced crypt cell proliferation and differentiation to increase the absorptive area, have never been ruled out. Here, we investigated cell proliferation and mRNA expression of mineral absorption-related genes in the PRL-exposed IEC-6 crypt cells. As expected, the cell proliferation was not altered by PRL. Inasmuch as the mRNA expressions of villous cell markers, including dipeptidylpeptidase-4, lactase and glucose transporter-5, were not increased, PRL was not likely to enhance crypt cell differentiation into the absorptive villous cells. In contrast to the previous findings in villous cells, PRL was found to downregulate the expression of calbindin-D(9k), claudin-3 and occludin in IEC-6 crypt cells, while having no effect on transient receptor potential vanilloid family channels-5/6, plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PMCA)-1b and Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger-1 expression. In conclusion, IEC-6 crypt cells did not respond to PRL by increasing proliferation or differentiation into villous cells. The present results thus supported the previous hypothesis that PRL enhanced mineral absorption predominantly by increasing transporter expression and activity in the absorptive villous cells.
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PMID:Proliferation and mRNA expression of absorptive villous cell markers and mineral transporters in prolactin-exposed IEC-6 intestinal crypt cells. 2228 85