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)

Female rats of the Wistar strain, weighing 40-60 g were used to study the effect of fish meals (Coryphaenoides rupestris, Chimaera monstruosa and Merluccius merluccius) on the disaccharidases and alkaline phosphatase in the small intestine in relation to the control group which consumed casein. Fish meal diets diminished lactase and alkaline phosphatase activity, the latter being most remarkable in animals fed Ch. monstruosa meal, while no statistical variations in maltase and sucrase activity were observed. Maltase, sucrase and lactase activity of animals fed Ch. monstruosa meal dropped in comparison with those fed C. rupestris meal, while the alkaline phosphatase activity showed no significant changes.
Rev Esp Fisiol 1982 Sep
PMID:[Effect of various fish meals on disaccharidases and alkaline phosphatase of the small intestine in rats]. 681 26

Explanting chick embryo duodenal tissue elicits an increase in the activities of alkaline phosphatase and maltase, an effect which is greatly enhanced by the addition of thyroxine. A large part of the elevated enzyme activity is released into the culture medium, from which it can be sedimented by centrifugation at 200 000 X g. The resulting pellet contains 87% or more of the alkaline phosphatase and maltase activity present in the medium at the end of 72 h of culture, but only about 25% of the protein. Negative staining of the pellet reveals the presence of microvesicles, the surfaces of which bear tiny protrusions resembling the knobs that have been seen on isolated microvilli and in preparations of purified microvillous membrane. The microvesicles appear to be derived from fragmentation of microvilli. Microvesicles with similar properties can be washed out of the duodenal lumen of embryos near hatching, suggesting that vesiculation may be a normal process that plays a useful role in intestinal function.
Biochim Biophys Acta 1980 Sep 18
PMID:Microvillous membrane vesicle accumulation in media during culture of intestine of chick embryo. 699 25

The API ZYM system (Analytab Products, Plainview, N.Y.), containing 19 chromogenic substrates, was utilized semiquantitatively to detect extracellular acid and alkaline phosphatases, aminopeptidases, proteases, esterase-lipase, phosphoamidase, and glycosidases in 128 oral and nonoral isolates of black-pigmented Bacteroides, Actinobacillus, Haemophilus aphrophilus, Capnocytophaga, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Wolinella recta, and Veillonella parvula. In the black-pigmented Bacteroides group of organisms, a strong trypsin reaction was present in Bacteroides gingivalis (oral species) but not in Bacteroides asaccharolyticus (nonoral species). Bacteroides melaninogenicus subsp. melaninogenicus, in contrast to Bacteroides melaninogenicus subsp. intermedius, exhibited strong N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase activity. H. aphrophilus produced beta-galactosidase and alpha-glucosidase, but the closely related Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans did not. Capnocytophaga was distinct with respect to strong aminopeptidase reactions. This study showed that a wide range of enzymes which have the potential of causing tissue injury and inflammation can be elaborated from major oral gram-negative species. Also, the API ZYM system appears to be a valuable adjunct to traditional biochemical testing in identifying oral gram-negative species.
J Clin Microbiol 1981 Sep
PMID:Enzymatic characterization of some oral and nonoral gram-negative bacteria with the API ZYM system. 702 98

The protein content and the activities of alkaline phosphatase, maltase, and sucrase were measured at 0800, 1000, 1200, 1400, and 1600 in saline extracts of the proximal small bowels of germfree and of ex-germfree mice colonized with an indigenous microbiota. In extracts prepared from germfree mice, the total activities of all of the enzymes were relatively constant throughout the sampling period. Likewise, the total activity of alkaline phosphatase in extracts prepared from associated mice varied little as a function of time. By contrast, the total activities of maltase and sucrase in the extracts from these latter animals varied significantly from sample to sample. The total activity levels in extracts from germfree mice were approximately twofold greater than the levels in extracts from associated mice. The specific activities of alkaline phosphatase and sucrase did not vary from sample to sample in extracts prepared from either type of mouse. In contrast, the specific activity of maltase in extracts prepared from both germfree and associated mice differed significantly from sample to sample. The specific activities of all three enzymes were greater in extracts from germfree animals than in those from associated animals. The protein content of extracts prepared from germfree mice also was greater than that of extracts prepared from associated animals at every sampling time. The amount of protein extractable from the mucosa of the small bowels of the former animals varied significantly at different sampling times during the day, whereas the amount of protein extractable from the tracts of associated animals remained relatively constant throughout the day. The indigenous microbiota apparently stabilizes in some way the amount of protein extractable from the mucosa of the mouse small bowel.
Appl Environ Microbiol 1981 Sep
PMID:Influence of indigenous microbiota on amount of protein and activities of alkaline phosphatase and disaccharidases in extracts of intestinal mucosa in mice. 702 54

The intestinal brush-border disaccharidases most resistant to pancreatic protease digestion in vitro are lactase and trehalase. When compared to maltase and sucrase, they are also those which showed the largest increase during development of guinea pig fetuses. These results suggest that pancreatic proteases may play a role in the control of brush-border disaccharidase activities during fetal development.
Biomedicine 1981 Sep
PMID:Control of disaccharidase activities in brush-border membranes of guinea pig fetuses: a role of pancreatic proteases? 702 47

The synthesis of 3-nitro-4-(6-aminohexylamido)phenylboronic acid is described. The properties of two novel forms of immobilized phenylboronate agarose adsorbents [m-aminophenylboronic acid-Matrex Gel and 3-nitro-4-(6-aminohexylamido)phenylboronic acid-Sepharose CL-6B] were investigated. Both gels bind and selectively retard the glycoprotein alpha-glucosidase from yeast. The retardation is affected by following parameters: (i) pH, (ii) presence of sugar, (iii) concentration of sugar and (iv) buffer species (especially triethanolamine). Five sugars were studied, namely sorbitol, fructose, ribose, glucose and maltose. The concentration of sugar required to produce significant retardation increased in the above order, whereas the ability of sugar to form a complex with boron decreases in the same order. These effects were observed with crude as well as pure enzyme. Since alpha-glucosidase is a glycoprotein, it is proposed that this protein is mainly bound to these immobilized phenylboronates via sugar (glyco) residues. Displacement of the enzyme from the column is effected by the sugar in the buffer (or in a preincubation mixture). However, the marked pH-dependence (this retardation effect could only be observed at pH 7.4) suggests that these results are not due solely to hydrophobic or ionic mechanisms and are more complex than simple sugar-phenylboronic acid interactions.
Biochem J 1981 Sep 01
PMID:Affinity chromatography of yeast alpha-glucosidase using ligand-mediated chromatography on immobilized phenylboronic acids. 703 22

Experimentally induced diabetes enhances the specific activity of several microvillus membrane proteins in the rat small intestine. The increase in the specific activity of sucrase-isomaltase has been shown by others to be due to an increase in enzyme protein, raising the possibility that diabetes induces a generalized increase in microvillus membrane proteins. Since intramembrane particles (IMPs) seen on freeze-fracture replicas of microvillus membranes are thought to represent integral membrane proteins, we compared microvillus IMP densities in diabetic rats with those in control rats. In addition, mucosal sucrase, maltase, and alkaline phosphatase specific activities were measured in all animals. Diabetic rats had significantly increased sucrase and maltase but not alkaline phosphatase specific activities compared with control rats. The density of microvillus IMPs on both the protoplasmic and extracellular fracture faces of undifferentiated crypt cells and villus absorptive cells was not increased in experimental diabetes. These data indicate that diabetes does not result in a generalized increase in microvillus membrane proteins. Thus the enhanced activity of microvillus membrane proteins in diabetes appears to be highly selective.
Dig Dis Sci 1982 Sep
PMID:Structural features of the rat small intestinal microvillus membrane in acute experimental diabetes. 704 26

Both corticosterone and T4 have been previously implicated as causal factors in the ontogenic increases in jejunal sucrase and maltase activities during the third week of life in the rat. Furthermore, it is known that the administration of exogenous T4 during the developmental period causes significant increases in serum corticosterone concentrations. To determine whether the effects of T4 on sucrase and maltase are secondary to the corticosterone rise, we examined the effect of T4 administration in adrenalectomized (adX) pups. Serum corticosterone was measured in all operated animals. Some of the adX pups had substantial concentrations of circulating corticosterone. In adX pups with serum corticosterone levels below 0.1 microgram/dl, there was no effect of T4 on either maltase or sucrase activity. We also studied the effect of propylthiouracil-induced hypothyroidism on sucrase and maltase. At 21 days of age, both enzyme activities were significantly reduced in hypothyroid pups. Injections of either T4 or cortisone acetate were equally effective in restoring activities to normal. For sucrase, there was no further increase in activity when both hormones were administered. For maltase, the combined treatment gave activities that were significantly higher than those with either hormone alone. We conclude that for both sucrase and maltase, the effects of changes in thyroid status are primarily due to the accompanying changes in serum corticosterone. The normal rate of development of both enzymes appears to be principally under glucocorticoid control, although for maltase, T4 may have a facilitory action.
Endocrinology 1982 Sep
PMID:Relative importance of corticosterone and thyroxine in the postnatal development of sucrase and maltase in rat small intestine. 704 75

The effect of resuming food intake after a period of starvation (refeeding) on the specific activities of selected rat intestinal enzymes was determined. The rate of weight gain was higher in refed animals than in control animals, without a difference in food intake. Fasting caused intestinal atrophy which reversed rapidly on refeeding. Fasting decreased the specific activities of sucrase, maltase, and galactokinase, but did not affect the specific activities of hexokinase, pyruvate kinase, or crypt thymidine kinase. Sucrase, maltase, hexokinase, pyruvate kinase, and thymidine kinase specific activities all rose above control values during refeeding. The overshoot in intestinal enzyme specific activities may help promote the rapid weight gain observed in refed rats and is an integral part of the total adaptation to fasting and refeeding.
Am J Clin Nutr 1982 Sep
PMID:Refeeding after a fast in rats: effects on small intestinal enzymes. 705 2

Streptomyces sp. TM-521 which produced alpha-glucoside hydrolase inhibitors, adiposins, was isolated from a soil sample collected in Hoya City, Tokyo. The strain belonged to the "gray color" series type of the ISP-classified Streptomyces. From the taxonomic studies, the strain TM-521 resembled with Streptomyces calvus in the morphological and physiological properties. This strain was accordingly identified as a strain of Streptomyces calvus.
J Antibiot (Tokyo) 1982 Sep
PMID:Studies on the alpha-glucoside hydrolase inhibitor, adiposin. II. Taxonomic studies on the producing microorganism. 714 21


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