Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.20 (alpha-glucosidase)
4,237 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of a new complex oligosaccharide (Bay g 5421) of microbial origin on human intestinal alpha-glucosidehydrolase activity was tested in mucosal homogenate from human small bowel biopsy specimens. The alpha-glucosidehydrolase inhibitor (alpha-GHI) exerted a potent inhibitory effect on glucoamylase, sucrase, and maltase, was minimally effective on isomaltase, and did not affect trehalase and lactase activity. Kinetic analysis revealed a fully competitive type of inhibition with a Ki of 1.3 x 10(-6) M; thus the inhibitor had a 15,000-fold higher affinity to the enzyme sucrase than its natural substrate sucrose. The new compound may prove to be useful in the study of carbohydrate maldigestion and malabsorption and may possibly be of therapeutic benefit in diabetes and obesity.
...
PMID:Inhibition of human intestinal alpha-glucosidehydrolases by a new complex oligosaccharide. 44 22

Gluten withdrawal from the diet is occasionally used speculatively in the management of multiple sclerosis. To assess whether there might be any rational basis for such a measure we have undertaken morphological and biochemical studies of the jejunal mucosa in 14 patients with multiple sclerosis. All were found to have morphologically normal villi, and quantitative estimation of surface-to-volume ratios gave values which did not differ from control subjects. Intraepithelial lymphocyte counts were normal. Antigliadin antibody titres were not raised in any patient. Estimation of activity of the brush border disaccharidases (sucrase, lactase, and maltase (showed that the mean level of each enzyme did not differ significantly from control subjects. Analytical subcellular fractionation of the biopsies showed no changes in the distribution or activity of marker enzymes for the brush order, lysosomes, mitochondria, cytosol, peroxisomes, or endoplasmic reticulum. It is concluded that there are no gross morphological or biochemical abnormalities in the jejunal mucosa in patients with multiple sclerosis and, therefore, that the use of gluten-free diets cannot be justified on the assumption that these patients suffer from a coeliac-like lesion of the small intestine.
...
PMID:Morphological and biochemical findings in jejunal biopsies from patients with multiple sclerosis. 44 78

Turnover in organ culture of human small intestinal membrane glycoproteins was measured by the pulse-chase technique, using 14C-glucosamine, 14C-fucose or 14C-leucine as tracers. Apparently, low degradation rates were found for the major high-molecular-weight proteins which co-migrated on SDS-polyacrylamide gels with maltase-glucoamylase, lactase-phlorizin-hydrolase and sucrase-isomaltase enzymic activities. In contrast, an unidentified glycoprotein appearing on gels next to alkaline phosphatase exhibited a higher degradation rate with an apparent half-life of about 30 h, this being similar to the half-life of total glycoprotein as measured in mucosal homogenates. The results obtained with the pulse-chase technique were confirmed by double isotope experiments using 14C-leucine and 3H-leucine as tracers. These findings indicate that in organ culture there is a low basic turnover of human intestinal membrane glycoproteins which co-migrate on gels with known glycosidase enzymic activities.
...
PMID:Turnover studies of human intestinal brush border membrane glycoproteins in organ culture. 45 41

To identify the site of stimulation of sucrase by a sucrose diet, changes in sucrase-specific activity of jejunal mucosa were studied after introduction of sucrose diet to carbohydrate-deprived rats. Results were correlated with simultaneous changes in villus gradients of sucrase-specific activity. Simultaneous with the introduction of sucrose diet, [(3)H]thymidine (100 muCi) was administered intravenously, and rates of cell migration measured during adaptation to the new diet. After a 72-h fast, rats fed sucrose diet for 6, 12, or 18 h showed no change in sucrase-specific activity in either whole mucosa or villus gradients. However, within 18-24 h after starting a sucrose diet, there was a marked rise in whole mucosal sucrase-specific activity above fasting values (99 +/- 14 vs. 38 +/- 4 muM glucose/min per g protein, P < 0.001) in association with the development of a region of increased activity at the lower villus (154 +/- 22 vs. 60 +/- 9 muM glucose/min per g protein, P < 0.02, but with no change in villus tip activity (56 +/- 5 vs. 46 +/- 8 muM glucose/min per g protein). Similar changes were seen in animals fed 24 h of sucrose diet after a 72-h carbohydratefree diet. Fasted animals fed sucrose diet for 36 h had increased sucrase-specific activity at the villus tip (144 +/- 11 muM glucose/min per g protein) as well as at the lower villus region, and this pattern persisted at 1 wk of sucrose diet. Maximal activity patterns for isomaltase and maltase paralleled those for sucrase, but the villus gradients for lactase were unaffected by sucrose diet. The region of maximal sucrase-specific activity always coincided with or followed the leading edge of radioactivity as determined by liquid scintillation counting. Therefore, sucrose-mediated changes in sucrase activity of the jejunal mucosa in the rat appear to be initiated at the level of the crypt epithelial cell and are expressed after a latent period of 18-24 h during which these cells mature and migrate toward the villus tip.
...
PMID:Site of substrate stimulation of jejunal sucrase in the rat. 47 72

The roles of extracellular and intracellular mechanisms in the degradation of brush border proteins have been investigated by studying the small intestinal mucosa of dogs with naturally occurring exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. Peroral jejunal biopsies were homogenised and the organelles separated by isopycnic centrifugation on continuous sucrose density gradients. The distributions of marker enzymes for the principal subcellular organelles were determined in the gradients and related to the specific activities in the homogenates. There were increased activities of the brush border carbohydrases zinc-resistant alpha-glucosidase, maltase and sucrase in the pancreatic insufficient animals, but no change in lactase activity. The activity of gamma-glutamyl transferase was also higher in the affected group; the activities of two other brush border enzymes, alkaline phosphatase and leucyl-beta-naphthylamidase, however, were unaltered. These findings with an increase in the modal density of the brush border from 1.20 to 1.22 are consistent with an enhanced glycoprotein content of the microvillus membrane. There were also rises in the activities of lysosomal enzymes. N-Acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase activity was increased in the soluble fractions and the percentage latent enzyme activity was reduced, findings indicative of an increased fragility of the lysosomal membrane. There were no marked alterations in the activities or density gradient distributions of marker enzymes for the other organelles, stressing the specificity of the changes in the brush borders and lysosomes. These findings are compatible with the degradation of certain exposed brush border proteins by pancreatic proteases and suggest that when this is defective, intracellular degradative mechanisms may be stimulated.
...
PMID:Biochemical changes in the jejunal mucosa of dogs with naturally occurring exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. 48 65

The concomitant appearance of enterokinase (EK) and trypsin activities in the human intestinal mucosa is indicative of the importance of EK as an activator of trypsinogen and therefore as the key enzyme in protein digestion. Enterokinase can be detected in fetal mucosa from the 26th week of gestation on, paralleling appearance of tryptic activity in meconium. The developmental pattern of EK activity increases with age. Between 26 to 30 weeks of gestation, the EK activity is only 6% and full term babies (40 weeks) 20% of that found in older children. In contrast, lactase studies during development show a lactase activity of only 30% in human fetuses between 26 to 34 weeks of gestation as compared to full term babies. During the same gestational period, sucrase and maltase activities reach 70% of the full term. In addition, the distributional pattern of EK differs from the disaccharidases, showing the highest activity in duodenum and the lowest in ileum, whereas disaccharidases are highest in jejunum with lower activity in duodenum and ileum. Differences in topographical distribution and time of appearance of EK and disaccharidases may be attributed to differences in orgin as well as subcellular localization of these enzymes. It is conceivable that the premature infant, between 26 to 30 weeks of gestation, is better equipped to deal with hydrolysis of alpha-glucosides than of lactose.
...
PMID:Developmental pattern of small intestinal enterokinase and disaccharidase activities in the human fetus. 55 25

The effect of cows' milk protein (CMP) on the mucosal disaccharidases was investigated in 23 infants with acute infective enteritis. Jejunal biopsies performed before and after cows' milk provocation were subjected to histological examination and to mucosal disaccharidase enzyme (lactase, sucrase, and maltase) analyses. After milk challenge, changes in mucosal histology were observed in 18 infants, in 17 of them the levels of all 3 mucosal disaccharidases were much reduced. 10 of these infants developed diarrhoea and, in 6, the stools were positive for reducing sugar. It is concluded that CMP has a deleterious effect on the jejunal mucosa of young infants recovering from infective enteritis, so that in the management of young infants with sugar intolerance secondary to infective enteritis, CMP and lactose should be excluded from the diet.
...
PMID:Cows' milk protein-sensitive enteropathy: an important contributing cause of secondary sugar intolerance in young infants with acute infective enteritis. 57 Mar 76

Camels with cannulas in the small intestine were used to study the "digestive-absorptive" capacities of the small intestine. Solutions of different carbohydrates were infused through the cannulas and the responses in blood glucose levels were measured. Monosaccharides were readily absorbed from the camel small intestine. The pattern of disaccharide absorption indicated that there was high lactase activity and low maltase and sucrase activity, in the camel small intestinal mucosa.
...
PMID:Studies on the digestion of carbohydrates in the camel (Camelus dromedarius). 59 40

7 infants, aged 5 weeks to 11 months, with clinically documented intolerance to cow's milk protein, chronic diarrhea, and failure to thrive, underwent small intestinal (peroal, suction) biopsy before and after withdrawal of milk proteins. Mucosal specimens were examined by light microscopy and assayed for disaccharidase activities. In all patients, moderate to severe mucosal changes were presented, associated with marked inflammation of lamina propria and damages to the brushborder. Disaccharidase activities (lactase, sucrase, maltase and palatinase) were markedly depressed in all. Follow-up biopsies were obtained in 6 infants, after 3-5 months on a milk-protein-free diet. At the time of the second biopsy, the disaccharidase activities had risen significantly and histologic improvement had occurred in each instance. In infancy, intestinal mucosal lesions due to intolerance to cow's milk protein are histologically indistinguishable from those seen in gluten-sensitive enteropathy and are associated with marked secondary disaccharidase deficiencies. Following therapy, the activity of the disaccharidases become normal or near normal prior to the complete morphologic recovery of the small intestinal mucosa.
...
PMID:Disaccharidase deficiency in infants with cow's milk protein intolerance. Response to treatment. 62 28

Adult and suckling (13 days old) rat intestinal brush borders have been purified by the procedure of Schmitz et al. (25). Enzymatic proteins have been separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In the adult rat, enzyme proteins have been separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In the adult rat, enzyme activities in order from the origin were: maltase/glucoamylase/sucrase-isomaltase (protein band 3), lactase (protein band 5), maltase/sucrase-isomaltase (protein band 6) and alkaline phosphatase (protein bands 8 and 9). In the suckling rat, protein band 5 associated with lactase activity was found to be markedly higher compared to the adult rat. Gels were completely devoid of sucrase-isomaltase activity while protein band 3 was strikingly reduced and protein band 6 absent. After hydrocortisone administration to suckling rats, a new band associated with sucrase-isomaltase activity appeared in position 6, whereas protein band 3 markedly increased with the simultaneous appearance of sucrase-isomaltase activity.
...
PMID:Separation and characterization of intestinal brush border enzymes in adult rats and in suckling rats under normal conditions and after hydrocortisone injections. 63 79


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>