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)

Interactions of lipids and proteins in isolated rat intestinal microvillus membranes were examined by studying the temperature dependence of enzyme activities and of D-glucose transport in relation to the membrane lipid thermotropic transition observed by fluorescence polarization (26 +/- 2 degrees C) and differential scanning calorimetry (23--39 degrees C). Two groups of activities were defined. Enzymes of the first group, comprising lactase, maltase, sucrase, leucine aminopeptidase, and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, all yielded a single slope on the Arrhenius plot in the range 10--40 degrees C and did not appear to experience functionally the effects of the lipid thermotropic transition. Each activity of the second group, comprising calcium- and magnesium-dependent adenosine triphosphatases, p-nitrophenylphosphatase, and D-glucose transport, showed a change in the slope of the Arrhenius plot in the range 25--30 degrees C, corresponding to the lower region of the lipid transition. The terms "extrinsic" and "intrinsic" activities could be applied to these groups. Delipidation of the particulate p-nitrophenylphosphatase removed the discontinuity in the Arrhenius plot. Subsequent relipidation with a variety of lipids restored a break point, but the temperature corresponded to the original discontinuity (25--29 degrees C) rather than to the phase transition temperature of the exogenous lipid added.
...
PMID:Functional interactions of lipids and proteins in rat intestinal microvillus membranes. 3 92

Different hydrolases (cellobiase, enterokinase, lactase, leucine aminopeptidase, alcaline phosphatase and trehalase) of the brush border's enterocytes of the rat have been studied by electrofocusing. Every hydrolase is focused in a single peak, the pI of which is given.
...
PMID:[Electrofocusing of hydrolases in rat brush border enterocytes]. 12 72

Activities of the brush border enzymes alkaline phosphates, leucine aminopeptidase and lactase and the lysosomal enzymes alpha-mannosidase and beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase increased in the serum of newly-born lambs fed colostrum. Feeding lipid and protein components of colostrum and bovine serum resulted in enzyme responses similar to those observed after feeding colostrum. Activities of each of the enzymes increased in mesenteric lymph collected from newly-born lambs when immunoglobulins were being absorbed from the jejunum and ileum.
...
PMID:Intestinal brush border and lysosomal enzymes and immunoglobulin absorption in the newly-born lamb. 41 Apr

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.
...
PMID:Effect of the antiprotozoal agent metronidazole (Flagyl) on absorptive and digestive functions of the rat intestine. 147 60

Paired xenografts of near-term fetal rabbit jejunum were subcutaneously implanted in the backs of athymic nude (nu/nu) mice. At 3 to 4 weeks post-implantation, the grafts had histologic, ultrastructural, and biochemical (lactase, sucrase, alkaline phosphatase, leucine aminopeptidase) parameters comparable to age-matched control rabbits. Four weeks post-transplantation the xenografts were intraluminally inoculated with various strains of lapine attaching and effacing E. coli or group A rotavirus. Infection with 2 strains of E. coli resulted in typical light microscopic and ultrastructural lesions of attachment and effacement. Immunohistochemical analysis of rotavirus-infected xenografts demonstrated rotavirus antigen within enterocytes. These lesions are comparable to those in conventional rabbits. Intestinal xenografts are a novel, highly controlled, and reproducible model which may have unique applications in the study of enteric diseases. The model provides anatomically and biochemically correct intestinal mucosal epithelium uncomplicated by variables such as enteric flora, host immune response, gastric, hepatic, and pancreatic secretions and is susceptible to infection by specific enteropathogens. Xenografts, therefore, may be a viable alternative in certain investigations where whole animals, ligated intestinal loops, organ cultures, or cell cultures might otherwise be chosen.
...
PMID:Development, characterization, and utilization of an intestinal xenograft model for infectious disease research. 175 15

Oral administration of the antiulcerogenic drug, cimetidine, was studied on kidney-bound hydrolytic enzymes at three different dose levels (30 mg, 100 mg, and 2000 mg/kg body weight) and for single administration for 2 and 24 h, and daily administration for 15 days in mice. It significantly inhibited Na+, K(+)-ATPase, Mg(2+)-ATPase, and Ca2+, Mg(2+)-ATPase in the isolated basolateral membrane (BLM). Brush-border-membrane-(BBM)-associated enzymes, sucrase, lactase, maltase, leucine aminopeptidase, and alkaline phosphatase also showed a marked reduction. Substrate saturation kinetics revealed the nature of inhibition was of mixed type in the case of sucrase, lactase, maltase, and alkaline phosphatase (Km was increased, while Vmax decreased), whereas it was of non-competitive type for leucine aminopeptidase (Km was unchanged, while Vmax decreased). In vitro addition of cimetidine (5-20 mM) to the BBM also inhibited the enzyme activity. Dixon plot produced the inhibition constant (Ki) for cimetidine in the case of maltase, alkaline phosphatase, and leucine aminopeptidase in the order of 14.83, 32.83 and 11.5 mM, respectively. Analysis of lipids revealed a significant reduction in BBM-associated phospholipid and phospholipid/cholesterol molar ratio, while the neutral lipid fraction, i.e., cholesterol and triglycerides were not altered. Free fatty acid exhibited an increase after drug treatment, which was significant at higher dose after 24 h of single and 15 days of daily treatment. BLM-associated lipids did not exhibit any significant change. Cimetidine-induced depression in renal BLM- and BBM-associated disaccharidases and ATPases, at least at the higher dose level, may have serious consequences in the absorption of end-product nutrients.
...
PMID:Depression of membrane-bound hydrolases by cimetidine in mouse renal basolateral and brush border. 183 34

The present study intended to evaluate the influences of Metagonimus yokogawai on the activities of brush border membrane bound enzymes of the small intestine. Mice were infected with 500 metacercariae respectively, and the worm recovery, morphological changes and enzyme activities were observed chronologically. A part of them were followed after the treatment. Recovered worms decreased in number continuously after the infection, and they were less than 10% after 2 weeks and almost zero after 28 weeks. Villous atrophy and stromal inflammation were found at two locations of the proximal jejunum from 2 weeks to 4 weeks after the infection. The enzymes, alkaline phosphatase, leucine aminopeptidase and disaccharidases (sucrase, lactase, maltase, and trehalase), showed lowered activities in the duodenum and proximal jejunum of the infected mice but they increased in the distal jejunum for the first two weeks. From three weeks after the infection, the activities were gradually recovered. In one week treated mice, they recovered the activities at 2 weeks from the treatment, but there found no differences of the activities between the 3 week treated group and infected controls. The present data reveal that M. yokogawai infection induces degenerative changes of the host's intestinal mucosa not only morphologically but functionally during the initial phase of infection. The lowered enzyme activities in acute metagonimiasis should be associated with malabsorption and diarrhea.
...
PMID:Activities of brush border membrane bound enzymes of the small intestine in Metagonimus yokogawai infection in mice. 191 29

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.
...
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.
...
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

Effects of feeding high-protein (HP) and high-fat (HF) diets to lactating rats have been studied on the development of microvillus membrane enzymes and glycosylation in suckling rats. The activities of sucrase and lactase were significantly (P less than 0.01) decreased in the pups reared on HP fed dams. Alkaline phosphatase (AP), leucine aminopeptidase (LAP) and gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase (gamma-GTP) activities were essentially similar in HP and pair-fed groups. Pups reared on dams fed HF-diet, revealed nearly a 20% increase in disaccharidase levels and a significant (P less than 0.05) decrease in AP activity compared to the pair-fed controls. The activities of LAP and GTP were unaffected under these conditions. Sialic acid content was unaltered, however, fucose level of the membranes was significantly reduced in pups nursed by mothers fed HP-(P less than 0.05) or HF-(P less than 0.01) diet. The binding of 125I-labelled wheat germ agglutinin and Ulex europeus agglutinin was in agreement to the data on sialic acid and fucose contents of the membranes. The binding of peanut agglutinin to microvillus membranes was enhanced by 31% and 21% in HP and HF groups, respectively. These findings suggest that the quality of maternal nutrition affects the enzymes and glycosylation of brush-borders in developing rat intestine.
...
PMID:Maternal nutrition and development of intestinal functions: II--Effect of feeding high protein and high fat diets to lactating rats. 225 72


1 2 3 4 5 Next >>