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)

The effect of oral epidermal growth factor (EGF) on histological and biochemical changes in epithelium in the small intestine was studied in colostrum-deprived neonatal pigs. Forty-eight pigs were infected at 4 days of age with 2 x 10(7) plaque-forming units of porcine group A rotavirus and orally fed a simulated sow-milk diet supplemented with 0.0, 0.5, or 1.0 mg/L recombinant human EGF. Sixteen noninfected pigs were fed a diet without EGF supplementation. Infected pigs developed severe diarrhea; they also consumed 25% less food and gained 60% less weight than noninfected pigs. Pigs were killed 8 days postinfection to collect samples at seven equidistant points in the small intestine. Rotavirus infection decreased villus height by 37% and reduced specific activity of lactase by 54%, of leucine aminopeptidase by 43%, and of alkaline phosphatase by 54% in the small intestine, compared with noninfected pigs. Only the supraphysiological dose of EGF (1.0 mg/L) consistently increased villus height in the proximal and mid-small intestine and lactase-specific activity in the mid-small intestine of rotavirus-infected pigs. However, this dose was only partially effective in restoring intestinal mucosal dimensions and enzyme activities. Supplemental EGF did not hasten the resolution of diarrhea. These data indicate that high physiological levels of EGF are beneficial in stimulating recovery of epithelium in the small intestine following rotavirus infection.
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PMID:Effect of orally administered epidermal growth factor on intestinal recovery of neonatal pigs infected with rotavirus. 787 90

Duodenal biopsies were collected from 38 subjects (24 female and 14 male) ranging in age from 55 to 91 years. Evidence of bacterial contamination of the small bowel (BCSB) was sought at the same time by bacterial culture of duodenal aspirates and by hydrogen and [14C]glycocholic acid breath tests; subjects were considered to be positive for BCSB if any one of the three tests was abnormal. Biopsies were analyzed for six brush-border membrane enzyme activities: maltase, sucrase, lactase, alkaline phosphatase, leucine aminopeptidase, and alpha-glucosidase. Analysis of covariance with age as the covariate indicated no significant effect of age on the specific activities of these enzymes. Mucosal Na(+)-dependent glucose transport was quantified in brush-border membrane vesicles prepared from the biopsies. In all groups, glucose transport at 20-30 sec was greater (ranging from mean values of 2.45 to 3.66 times) than at 45 min, consistent with Na(+)-coupled glucose transport, and no significant effect of age was observed. BCSB had no significant effect on specific activities of any of the duodenal mucosal hydrolases but was associated with reduced (P = 0.05) brush-border glucose transport. None of the variables studied was significantly affected by the gender of subjects. In conclusion, these biochemical data do not support the contention that reduced capacity for carbohydrate absorption in the elderly is explained by reductions in duodenal brush-border mucosal disaccharidase activities or glucose transport.
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PMID:Duodenal brush-border mucosal glucose transport and enzyme activities in aging man and effect of bacterial contamination of the small intestine. 844 69

We have assessed the effect of the oral ingestion of thioacetamide on small intestine structure and function. Thioacetamide-treated rats showed diminished mucosa weight; protein, DNA, and RNA content; and leucine aminopeptidase activity as compared to controls in both jejunum and ileum. In the jejunum, there was a reduction in the activities of alkaline phosphatase, ATPase, glucose-6-phosphatase, and myeloperoxidase, whereas in the ileum, maltase, lactase, and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase were reduced. In both jejunum and ileum we found enlarged intercellular spaces, dark epithelial enterocytes, and lymphocyte infiltration. Enterocytes showed lobulated nuclei, deranged mitochondria with loss of their cristae, dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum containing dense material, and vesiculation of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus. Smooth muscle cells of the intestine exhibited ultrastructural alterations. These findings indicate that chronic oral intake of thioacetamide mimics not only hepatic alterations but also small intestine alterations normally associated with human cirrhosis.
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PMID:Hepatotoxic agent thioacetamide induces biochemical and histological alterations in rat small intestine. 928 39

Hypoxia in the neonate is known to alter the activity of hepatic and pancreatic enzymes involved in lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of neonatal hypoxia on the activity of intestinal enzymes, and to determine whether the administration of glucocorticoids to neonates can mimic the effects of hypoxia. Hypoxia in neonatal rats (0-7 days) increased protein content, and lactase and maltase activity in the duodenal and the jejunal segments of the small intestine compared with normoxic controls. Hypoxia in juvenile rats (28-35 days) did not change these enzymes. Two weeks after returning hypoxic (0-7 days) pups to normoxia, their body weight remained lower than the age-matched controls. In the group recovering from hypoxia, sucrase, maltase, and leucine aminopeptidase activities were lower in the duodenal and the jejunal segment. Compared with controls, LDH activity was lower only in the jejunal intestine in the group recovering from hypoxia. All enzyme activities returned to control levels 3 weeks after recovery. Neonatal rats treated with dexamethasone had a decrease in body weight, but increases in sucrase and maltase activity in both the duodenal and the jejunal segment. Hypoxia in newborn rats caused a delayed maturation of small intestinal enzymes. Increases in serum glucocorticoids after hypoxic exposure probably do not play a major role in the delayed maturation of the disaccharidase activity in the small intestine.
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PMID:Effects of hypoxia on the development of intestinal enzymes in neonatal and juvenile rats. 1277 4

The present study was planned to observe the effect of protein-energy malnutrition on the gastric and duodenal mucosa. The activities of digestive enzymes (i.e. lactase, sucrase, maltase, trehalase, glucoamylase, leucine aminopeptidase, alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase) from the gastric (fundus, body and antrum) and duodenal mucosa [i.e. first (D1) and second (D2) part of the duodenum] were determined in 6 control, 6 protein-energy malnourished (PEM) and 6 rehabilitated young rhesus monkeys. There was a significant increase in the activity of the lactase enzyme in the antrum, and D1 and D2 portions of the duodenum of PEM monkeys, while the activity of all other enzymes was significantly increased in the D1 and D2 portions only. The increase in the activity of the above-mentioned enzymes became normal upon rehabilitation. There was no change in the enzyme activities of the gastric mucosa in mild-to-moderate PEM states. This study demonstrates that even mild-to-moderate malnutrition states affect the activity of enzymes in the gastric and duodenal mucosa. Enzyme activity recovers on rehabilitation.
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PMID:Effect of malnutrition on the digestive enzymes of the upper gastrointestinal tract of young rhesus monkeys. 1297 10

The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of mild-to-moderate protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) and rehabilitation on the digestive enzymes of the large bowel in young rhesus monkeys. The presence of these enzymes has already been reported in the large bowel by many authors. The activities of the digestive enzymes, i.e. lactase, sucrase, maltase, trehalase, glucoamylase, leucine aminopeptidase, alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, from different parts of the large bowel were determined in 6 controls, 6 PEM and 6 rehabilitated young rhesus monkeys. These monkeys had been used to study the effect of malnutrition on the small intestine and the results have already been published. There was a significant decrease in the sucrase in the ascending colon (p < 0.05); maltase in all the parts of the large bowel (p < 0.05); and glucoamylase activities (p < 0.05) in the caecum segment of the large bowel in the PEM group. The activity of other enzymes, i.e. lactase, trehalase, alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and leucine aminopeptidase, was unaffected in the PEM group. The changes in the enzyme activities recovered on rehabilitation of 21 weeks. The result of this study suggest that even mild-to-moderate malnutrition affects the enzyme activity of the large bowel, which recovers on rehabilitation.
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PMID:Effects of malnutrition on the digestive enzymes of the large bowel of young rhesus monkeys. 1516 29

We investigated whether dietary supplementation with L-arginine, the endogenous precursor of nitric oxide, might affect serum lipid levels and activities of intestinal mucosa enzymes in animals, in which diabetes was induced by administration of streptozotocin. Control and diabetic rats were fed diets with or without 2% L-arginine supplementation for 4 weeks. Diabetic rats had significantly higher concentrations of serum triglycerides and LDL-cholesterol than control rats. These alterations were partially reduced by L-arginine supplementation. Experimental diabetes did not influence the lactase and leucine aminopeptidase activity in the intestine, but the activity of alkaline phosphatase was increased. Furthermore, activities of maltase and sucrase in the intestinal mucosa were elevated in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats and were restored to control levels after dietary L-arginine supplementation. On the basis of the present experimental evidence, dietary L-arginine supplementation appears to affect the metabolism of lipoproteins and might alleviate some gastrointestinal dysfunctions, commonly seen in diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Effects of dietary L-arginine supplementation on serum lipids and intestinal enzyme activities in diabetic rats. 1535 82

Fasting and refeeding effects on gastrointestinal morphology and digestive enzyme activities of Atlantic salmon, held in tanks of seawater at 9 degrees C and 31 per thousand salinity, were addressed in two trials. Trial 1: Fish (mean body mass 1190 g) were fasted for 40 days and intestines sampled at day 0, 2, 4, 11, 19 and 40. Trial 2: Fish (1334 g), fasted for 50 days, were refed and sampled at day 0, 3 and 7. Mass, length, protein, and maltase, lactase, and leucine aminopeptidase (LAP) activities were analyzed for stomach (ST), pyloric caeca (PC), proximal (PI), mid (MI), and distal intestine (DI). PC contributed 50% of gastrointestinal mass and 75% of enzyme capacity. Fasting decreased mass and enzyme capacities by 20-50% within two days, and 40-75% after 40 days. In PC, specific brush border membrane (BBM) maltase activity decreased whereas BBM LAP increased during fasting. Upon refeeding, enzyme capacities were mostly regenerated after one week. The results suggest that refeeding should start slowly with about 25% of estimated feed requirement during the first 3 days, but may then be stepped up rapidly. Investigations of digestive processes of fed fish should only be performed when intestines are feed-filled to avoid bias due to effects of fasting.
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PMID:Fasting and refeeding cause rapid changes in intestinal tissue mass and digestive enzyme capacities of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.). 1604 60

The effect of feeding lead (50 mg kg(-1) body weight) daily for 7 days on the development of various brush border enzymes in the intestine has been studied. The activities of brush border sucrase (P < 0.001), lactase (P < 0.001), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (P < 0.05) and leucine aminopeptidase were reduced (P < 0.05), whereas the alkaline phosphatase level was augmented (P < 0.05) in lead fed rats compared with controls. Kinetic studies with sucrase revealed a low Vmax (0.224 in control and 0.160 units mg(-1) protein in lead exposed) with no change in Km (12.6-13.5 mM). Western blot analysis for alkaline phosphatase yielded intense staining of enzyme protein in lead fed rats compared with controls, however, the intensity of the antigen signal was reversed for sucrase under these conditions. These findings suggest that ingestion of lead may interfere with the crypt cell differentiation process thus affecting enzyme functions in the rat intestine.
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PMID:Expression of brush border enzymes in response to lead exposure in rat intestine. 1609 86

Brush border membrane-bound digestive enzymes such as disaccharidases (lactase, sucrase, and maltase), leucine aminopeptidase N, and alkaline phosphatase were measured in jejunum from pigs experimentally infected with porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV). Three piglets from the infected and control groups were euthanized by electrocution and subjected to necropsy at 24, 36, 48, 60, and 72 hours post-inoculation (hpi). The infection of PEDV to jejunum resulted in significant decreases in brush border membrane-bound digestive enzymes such as disaccharidases (lactase, sucrase, and maltase), leucine aminopeptidase N, and alkaline phosphatase. PEDV replication results in massive destruction of villous enterocytes leading to a marked reduction of intestinal epithelial surface and brush border membrane-bound digestive enzyme activity. Reduced enzymatic activity and villous atrophy in the small intestine is thought to result in a maldigestive and malabsorptive diarrhea.
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PMID:Decreased activity of brush border membrane-bound digestive enzymes in small intestines from pigs experimentally infected with porcine epidemic diarrhea virus. 1675 79


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