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)

Jejunal biopsies from 19 adult Greenland Eskimos were studied regarding disaccharidases, two intracellular beta-galactosidases, and morphological appearance. Fifteen of the patients (79%) had low lactase activity, and 3 of these (16%) had sucrase-isomaltase deficiency as well. Two patients had low trehalase activity. Microscopical appearance was essentially normal in all the biopsies, except for a certain stromal plasma cell infiltration. All the patients with low lactase activity had a measurable residual activity of brush border lactase, which was localized in the middle and apical parts of villi, as normally seen for digestive enzymes. Lysosomal acid beta-galactosidase and cytosol hetero beta-galactosidase were not altered. In the patients with sucrase-isomaltase deficiency there was a complete absence of active sucrase-isomaltase complex. The residual maltase, as well as the very weak residual isomaltase, was exerted exclusively by the heat stable maltases (maltase II and III). The material is the first one in which multiple, but not generalized disaccharidase deficiencies are demonstrated.
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PMID:Intestinal disaccharidases in Greenland Eskimos. 115 47

Very sensitive procedures were developed for the parallel determination of intestinal lactase (LPH) activity and the cognate mRNA. Between 14 and 20 weeks of gestation, lactase activity is low and varies only slightly; at 37 weeks, a relatively high level of activity is observed. The amounts of LPH mRNA correlates with the enzymatic activity (r = 0.64). Culture of fetal jejunal explants for 5 days induces by itself a 2-fold increase in LPH mRNA, without any significant change in lactase enzymatic activity. This increase may reflect the loss of a negative transcriptional regulation operative in vivo, and suggests an additional post-transcriptional regulatory component. The addition of hydrocortisone (50 ng/ml) during culture induces a doubling of lactase activity without variation in LHP mRNA, indicating a post-transcriptional modulation by hydrocortisone. The intestinal lysosomal acid beta-galactosidase activity was shown to be unaffected by hydrocortisone treatment. This observation clearly illustrates that the two intestinal beta-galactosidases are regulated differently. Our results suggests a complex developmental regulation of human intestinal lactase and that the perinatal increase in lactase activity could be modulated at a post-transcriptional level by hydrocortisone.
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PMID:The expression of lactase enzymatic activity and mRNA in human fetal jejunum. Effect of organ culture and of treatment with hydrocortisone. 156 81

The activities of various glycosidases in homogenates of the small-intestinal mucosa of one adult and two suckling echidnas, Tachyglossus aculeatus, were investigated. The activities of lactase (beta-D-galactosidase), beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, neuraminidase and alpha-L-fucosidase were higher in the sucklings than in the adult animal. Maltase and isomaltase activities were lower. Sucrase and cellobiase activities were absent or present in trace amounts only. The lactase activity had a pH optimum of 4.0-4.5, was predominantly in the soluble fraction following ultracentrifugation and was inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate, suggesting that it was due to a lysosomal acid beta-galactosidase and not a brush-border neutral lactase. The maltase activity of the sucklings also had the characteristics predominantly of a lysosomal acid hydrolase. It is proposed that in suckling echidnas, the oligosaccharides (mainly neuraminyllactose and fucosyllactose) of the mother's milk are digested intracellularly by lysosomal enzymes, rather than at the brush border, of the epithelial cells of the small-intestinal mucosa.
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PMID:Intestinal glycosidase activities in one adult and two suckling echidnas: absence of a neutral lactase (beta-D-galactosidase). 641 47

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