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)

The authors provide the data obtained during examination of 36 children with celiac disease and 18 children with lactase deficiency. The children's age ranged from 8 months to 15 years. All the children underwent spot biopsy of the gastric and duodenal mucosa followed by immunomorphological PAP-staining of the biopsy specimens and count of the number of gastrin- and somatostatin-producing cells. Gastrin in the blood serum was measured by radioimmunoassay. The children with celiac disease manifested an increase of the number of somatostatin-producing cells in the duodenum and decrease of their number in the pyloric part of the stomach, seen in the acute phase of the disease. The number of gastrin-producing cells remained unchanged. The level of gastrin declined in the acute phase and increased during a remission. The alterations described were found to be related to the atrophic processes in the small intestinal mucosa. In lactase deficiency, no significant alterations were established in the number of pyloric and duodenal endocrine cells or in blood gastrin level.
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PMID:[Disorders of humoral regulation of the digestive organ functions in children with malabsorption syndromes]. 167 86

Somatostatin is a widely distributed hormone localized in the central nervous system, pancreas and gastrointestinal tract. We have investigated the possible influence of somatostatin and a synthetic analogue, (D-Trp8,D-Cys14)-somatostatin, on the intestinal absorption 'in vivo' of D(+)-glucose and D(+)-galactose and also the effect on disaccharidase intestinal activities in hamster. Somatostatin, or its analogue, (12 micrograms/100 g body wt) was administered intraperitoneally 4 or 14 h prior to experiments. The results are compared to control animals. Animals treated with somatostatin and the synthetic analogue showed that there were no significant difference from control animals with respect to intestinal absorption of carbohydrates. Somatostatin produced inhibition of brush-border lactase activity in females only, whereas brush-border sucrase was increased 14 h after treatment in males and females, and brush-border maltase was inhibited in females only 4 h after hormone administration.
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PMID:Somatostatin and its analogue (D-Trp8,D-Cys14)-somatostatin do not modify intestinal absorption in vivo of carbohydrates in hamster intestine, but they do modify some disaccharidases. 251 89

Some aspects of small intestine maturation have been studied in the newborns from chronic ethanol-treated pregnant rats (25% ethanol in drinking fluid) immediately after birth (before suckling) and after 30 days of life. Litters delivered by mothers fed ad libitum with a standard diet diluted 50% with cellulose were used as a nutritional control. At birth, pups from ethanol-treated mothers showed significant decreases in total intestinal length and thickness, low total lactase activity and low somatostatin intestinal content. The intestinal alterations of these neonatal parameters are not present in newborns from mothers on fiber-diluted diet. From delivery, pups from different experimental groups were nursed by normal lactating dams. At 30 days of age neither of those parameters differed among the groups. We propose that the low levels of total lactase activity in newborns from alcoholic mothers, that are a consequence of a lower intestinal mucosa content, are a direct effect of ethanol in utero on the fetal gastrointestinal system.
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PMID:Low intestinal lactase activity in offspring from ethanol-treated mothers. 256 31

The aim of this study was to determine the effects of a model of intestinal extrinsic denervation on mucosal structure and function. Six dogs underwent in situ neural isolation of the jejunoileum (Group 2); six other dogs served as operated controls (Group 1), and five nonoperated dogs were naive controls (Group 3). Thirty-centimeter segments of proximal jejunum and distal ileum were excised before (time zero) and at 2 weeks and 8 weeks postoperatively in Groups 1 and 2, while similar regions were removed at time zero in Group 3. Tissues were analyzed for morphology with quantitative morphometry, mucosal disaccharidase activities (sucrase, maltase, and lactase), and tissue content of selected regulatory peptides in transmural, mucosa/submucosa, and muscularis regions. In situ neural isolation had no significant or consistent effects on morphology/morphometry or on mucosal disaccharidase activities. Tissue content of neuropeptide Y decreased markedly (P < 0.002) in all layers of the jejunal and ileal walls, but tissue content of vasoactive inhibitory polypeptide, substance P, cholecystokinin, neurotensin, met-enkephalin, neurokinin A, somatostatin, and calcitonin gene-related peptide demonstrated only minor changes. The physiologic effects of intestinal transplantation (extrinsic denervation and disruption of intrinsic, enteric neural continuity, and lymphatic drainage) have little effect on morphology, mucosal disaccharidase activity, and tissue content of most regulatory peptides. How these minor alterations might affect enteric function, however, needs to be investigated.
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PMID:Neural isolation of the jejunoileum. Effect on tissue morphometry, mucosal disaccharidase activity, and tissue peptide content. 865 18

In this study we investigated whether brain-gut peptides are implicated in the activation of the hypophysial-adrenal axis (HAA) in suckling rats treated orally with spermine. The first group of rats received i.p. injections of bombesin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), somatostatin or neurotensin, starting on day 11 of life, and killed on day 14. The small intestine was removed and analysed for its content of proteins, DNA, polyamines and for its specific activity (SA) of disaccharidases. The second group of rats received one of the hormones cited above and was killed 45 min after the treatment for determination of corticosterone plasma concentration. Rats of the third group were adrenalectomised then treated with bombesin as the first group. The fourth group of rats was orally treated with spermine and sacrificed 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8 h thereafter for analysis of plasma and intestinal concentrations of bombesin. The i.p. injection of bombesin increased the sucrase and maltase SA in the whole small intestine, while it decreased the lactase SA in the distal part. Intestinal weight and length, contents of DNA, protein, spermidine and spermine, and corticosterone plasma levels were enhanced by bombesin treatment. Somatostatin, neurotensin and VIP were ineffective on all the parameters studied. Adrenalectomy, in bombesin-treated rats, decreased the sucrase and maltase SA in the whole intestine, and decreased the lactase SA in the proximal intestine. It has no effect on intestinal weight and length, and protein content. Oral administration of spermine had no effect on plasma concentration of bombesin, whereas it decreased the content of this peptide in the whole small intestine. It is possible that bombesin may control intestinal development in suckling rats and be a link between the ingestion of spermine and the liberation of corticosterone by the adrenal glands.
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PMID:Involvement of bombesin in spermine-induced corticosterone secretion and intestinal maturation in suckling rats. 920 97