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

Interactions of lipids and proteins in isolated rat intestinal microvillus membranes were examined by studying the temperature dependence of enzyme activities and of D-glucose transport in relation to the membrane lipid thermotropic transition observed by fluorescence polarization (26 +/- 2 degrees C) and differential scanning calorimetry (23--39 degrees C). Two groups of activities were defined. Enzymes of the first group, comprising lactase, maltase, sucrase, leucine aminopeptidase, and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, all yielded a single slope on the Arrhenius plot in the range 10--40 degrees C and did not appear to experience functionally the effects of the lipid thermotropic transition. Each activity of the second group, comprising calcium- and magnesium-dependent adenosine triphosphatases, p-nitrophenylphosphatase, and D-glucose transport, showed a change in the slope of the Arrhenius plot in the range 25--30 degrees C, corresponding to the lower region of the lipid transition. The terms "extrinsic" and "intrinsic" activities could be applied to these groups. Delipidation of the particulate p-nitrophenylphosphatase removed the discontinuity in the Arrhenius plot. Subsequent relipidation with a variety of lipids restored a break point, but the temperature corresponded to the original discontinuity (25--29 degrees C) rather than to the phase transition temperature of the exogenous lipid added.
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PMID:Functional interactions of lipids and proteins in rat intestinal microvillus membranes. 3 92

Cardiac tissue obtained by left-ventricular endomyocardial biopsy from patients with valvular heart-disease was assayed for marker enzyme activities of subcellular organelles and these were correlated with left ventricular function as assessed by haemodynamic studies. In patients with poor left ventricular function, calcium-dependent adenosine-triphosphatase (A.T.P.ase) activity, predominantly localised to the myofibrils, was strikingly reduced. Activity of lactate dehydrongenase, a cytosol enzyme, was significantly increased in tissue from patients with poor left ventricular function. The activity of enzymes associated with sarcolemma (5'-nucleotidase), mitochondria (glutamate dehydrogenase and monoamine oxidase), microsomes (neutral alpha-glucosidase), and lysosomes (acid phosphatase, N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase) was no different in patients with good or poor left ventricular function. It is suggested that reduced myofibrillary A.T.P.ase concentration is the biochemical basis for the impaired ventricular function.
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PMID:Enzymic analysis of cardiac biopsy material from patients with valvular heart-disease. 5 85

The polybasic macromolecules DEAE-dextran (diethylaminoethyl-dextran, molecular weight 500000) and poly-DL-lysine (molecular weight 30000-70000) were absorbed with a high affinity by spheroplasts of Candida utilis and subsequently, induced lysis. The extent of lysis of spheroplasts and of the liberated vacuoles was studied under various conditions using alpha-glucosidase activity and soluble arginine as cytoplasmic and vacuolar markers, respectively. Adsorption of polybases was rapidly completed even at 0 degrees C; however, with small doses, lysis was poor at 0-12 degrees C and extensive at temperatures above 12 degrees C. This permitted the completion of adsorption before initiating lysis. The purified vacuoles were also sensitive to polybases though less so than the spheroplasts; however, after lysis of spheroplasts the liberated vacuoles were well protected against the action of polybases. A treatment with polybases which disrupted more than 99% of the spheroplasts left at least 70% of the vacuoles intact. Potassium chloride in high concentrations and calcium chloride in low concentrations inhibited polybase induced lysis of spheroplasts by preventing or even reversing the polybase adsorption. A polyacidic macromolecule, dextran sulfate, could prevent but not reverse the adsorption of polybase and subsequent lysis. Metabolic inhibitors reduced the susceptibility of spheroplasts to polybase induced lysis. Vacuoles isolated from polybase lysed spheroplasts still contained large pools of soluble amino acids, and their ability to transport arginine specifically is a further indication of their functional integrity.
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PMID:Polybase induced lysis of yeast spheroplasts. A new gentle method for preparation of vacuoles. 24 1

Brush border membrane vesicles were isolated from rat kidney cortex by differential centrifugation in the presence of 10 mM calcium. Their properties were compared to brush border vesicles isolated by free-flow electrophoresis. By the calcium precipitation method membrane vesicles were obtained in a shorter time with a similar enrichment of brush border marker enzymes (11- to 12-fold for alkaline phosphatase and maltase), with a similarly reduced activity of the marker enzyme for basal-lateral plasma membranes and an almost identical protein composition as revealed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. The transport properties of the two membrane preparations for D-glucose, L-phenylalanine, and phosphate are essentially the same; there is some indication for a lower sodium permeability of the vesicles prepared by the calcium precipitation method. The latter vesicles were also shown to exhibit sodium gradient stimulated uptake of L-glutamate.
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PMID:Properties of brush border vesicles isolated from rat kidney cortex by calcium precipitation. 75 88

From an homogeneous breeding one can occasionnally select a rat (rat +) showing an exceptionally high calcium absorption. For such a rat, high calcium absorption is accompained by a similar high alkaline phosphatase activity in the ileum. This fact was shown in six different assays. For rat +, this enzymatic excitation seems specific for intestinal phosphatase. Other characteristic enzymes of brush border such as maltase, invertase and leucylaminopeptidase do not vary much. Only slight modifications of phosphatase activity were observed in other organs or tissues: plasma, kidney, bone. The variations for liver are more important but unsignificant. The high calcium absorption is related to alkaline phosphatase. It is observed atdifferent steps of the preperation and can be increased by sorbitol, this last property being characteristic of the enzyme. The aptitude of a rat + for high calcium absorption is only momentany. When it goes back to usual calcium utilization, intestinal mucosa shows a normal phosphatasic activity.
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PMID:[New correlation between absorption of calcium and activity of intestinal alkaline phosphatases]. 93 Dec 62

A highly thermostable alpha-glucosidase (E C.3.2.1.20) from an extreme thermophile, Thermus thermophilus HB 8, was purified to homogeneous by ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE-cellulose chromatography and preparative slab gel electrophoresis. The enzyme was purified 17 fold with 21% recovery of activity. The enzyme had a molecular weight of 67000 by SDS-PAGE. The isoelectric point was pH4.5 by IEF on PAG. The enzyme hydrolized p-nitrophenyl-alpha-glucoside (PN-PG), sucrose and maltose, but not cellobiose, melibiose and soluble starch. The km value for PNPG was 0.4mmol/L, the Vmax was 0.29 mumol.min-1.mg-1. The enzyme exhibited high thermostability. After incubation at 90 degrees C for 10 h in 50 mmol/L acetate buffer pH 5.8, the enzyme retained 90% of its original activity. The half-live (t1/2) at 95 degrees C was 108 min. The enzyme was activated by Mg2+, Mn2+, Ca2+, Ba2+ and strongly inhibited by Hg2+, Cu2+. Modification of the enzyme by EDC or DEPC led to complete loss of activity, which suggests that carboxyl group(s) and histidine residue(s) are essential for activity of alpha-glucosidase.
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PMID:[Purification and characterization of alpha-glucosidase from an extreme thermophile, Thermus thermophilus HB 8]. 141 35

Oral administration of the antiulcerogenic drug, cimetidine, was studied on kidney-bound hydrolytic enzymes at three different dose levels (30 mg, 100 mg, and 2000 mg/kg body weight) and for single administration for 2 and 24 h, and daily administration for 15 days in mice. It significantly inhibited Na+, K(+)-ATPase, Mg(2+)-ATPase, and Ca2+, Mg(2+)-ATPase in the isolated basolateral membrane (BLM). Brush-border-membrane-(BBM)-associated enzymes, sucrase, lactase, maltase, leucine aminopeptidase, and alkaline phosphatase also showed a marked reduction. Substrate saturation kinetics revealed the nature of inhibition was of mixed type in the case of sucrase, lactase, maltase, and alkaline phosphatase (Km was increased, while Vmax decreased), whereas it was of non-competitive type for leucine aminopeptidase (Km was unchanged, while Vmax decreased). In vitro addition of cimetidine (5-20 mM) to the BBM also inhibited the enzyme activity. Dixon plot produced the inhibition constant (Ki) for cimetidine in the case of maltase, alkaline phosphatase, and leucine aminopeptidase in the order of 14.83, 32.83 and 11.5 mM, respectively. Analysis of lipids revealed a significant reduction in BBM-associated phospholipid and phospholipid/cholesterol molar ratio, while the neutral lipid fraction, i.e., cholesterol and triglycerides were not altered. Free fatty acid exhibited an increase after drug treatment, which was significant at higher dose after 24 h of single and 15 days of daily treatment. BLM-associated lipids did not exhibit any significant change. Cimetidine-induced depression in renal BLM- and BBM-associated disaccharidases and ATPases, at least at the higher dose level, may have serious consequences in the absorption of end-product nutrients.
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PMID:Depression of membrane-bound hydrolases by cimetidine in mouse renal basolateral and brush border. 183 34

The effect on rats of oral doses (38.66 mM/kg body wt) of propane-1,2-diol (PD) administered daily for 10 (Group 1), 20 (Group 2), and 30 days (Group 3) was investigated. Weight gain was initially retarded (P less than 0.05) in Group 1, but was later reversed and elevated significantly (P less than 0.05) in Groups 2 and 3 as compared with their respective controls receiving an equal volume of saline. PD showed a tendency toward enhancing the activities of various enzymes involved in terminal digestion, with the significant effect exerted in few groups on sucrase (P less than 0.05), lactase (P less than 0.05), and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (P less than 0.05) when compared with the respective controls. Absorption of D-glucose, glycine, L-aspartic acid, L-lysine, and calcium was elevated and was especially significant in Groups 2 and 3 (P less than 0.001). The structural integrity of the jejunal surface was retained for the most part. A similar examination of the effects of PD was also carried out in vitro to ascertain whether PD itself or its metabolites are involved in its action. The in vitro effects of propane-1,2-diol were compared with those of the more toxic compound propane-1,3-diol. The former exerted greater inhibitory action on the activities of the disaccharidases. The degree of inhibition was in the order sucrase much greater than lactase greater than maltase. The kinetic data revealed that inhibition by 1,2-diol in native and detergent solubilized sucrase is noncompetitive, with Ki values in the range of 0.35-0.41 M. The two diols did not alter the nutrient transport in the brush border membrane vesicles. The present work on rats indicates that PD may influence the intestinal digestive and absorptive functions in vivo and that this in vivo effect of PD is different from that observed in vitro suggesting that the nutritional and toxicological effect of PD may be mediated by different mechanisms.
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PMID:The effect of propane-diols on the intestinal uptake of nutrients and brush border membrane enzymes in the rat. 188 24

Oral administration of embelin (75 mg/kg per day, daily for 15 and 30 days) to male rats caused significant elevation in the uptake of D-glucose, L-alanine, L-leucine and calcium in small intestinal segments. Embelin also produced significant increases in intestinal brush border membrane-associated enzymes (sucrase, lactase, maltase, alkaline phosphatase and leucine aminopeptidase) in both intestinal homogenates and partially purified brush border membrane preparations. Significant increases were also noted for microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase and cytosolic lactate dehydrogenase. Increase in brush border membrane-associated total lipids, phospholipids, cholesterol, triacylglycerol, unesterified fatty acids and ganglioside sialic acid were seen but not in the cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio. All these changes returned to control or near control levels following withdrawal of the drug.
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PMID:Effects of embelin, a male antifertility agent, on absorptive and digestive functions of rat intestine. 192 15

Fifty two strains of anaerobic bacteria isolated from the upper gut of patients with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth were screened for phospholipase activity. Bacteroides melaninogenicus spp intermedius had the greatest activity. The effects of culture supernatants of this organism and deoxycholate on intestinal calcium absorption and disaccharidase activity were studied using a rat closed loop model. The supernatant decreased the in vitro uptake of calcium by 15% (p less than 0.001). Deoxycholate reduced calcium uptake by 16% (p less than 0.001). Combined culture supernatant and deoxycholate reduced calcium uptake by 39% (p less than 0.001) suggesting a potentiation of supernatant activity by deoxycholate. Culture supernatant and deoxycholate, both alone and combined, significantly reduced lactase, sucrase, and maltase activity. Electron microscopic evidence showed degeneration of microvilli, disruption of mitochondrial structure, and swelling of the endoplasmic reticulum after exposure of the intestinal loops to the supernatant or deoxycholate.
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PMID:Effects of an enteric anaerobic bacterial culture supernatant and deoxycholate on intestinal calcium absorption and disaccharidase activity. 197 95


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