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)

Absorption of carbohydrate was quantitated in 49 subjects without disease of the small bowel using a new technique for ileal perfusion. A double-lumen tube with an attached balloon was inserted retrograde through the colon and used to quantify arrival in the ileum of D-xylose and a nonabsorbable marker which had been taken orally. In the same way, absorption of sucrose and the effects of an inhibitor of alpha-glucosidase were also studied. Insertion of the assembly through the colon and intubation of the terminal ileum was usually possible within 30 min; we have designated the technique, endoscopic retrograde bowel insertion (ERBI). The test meals were 500 ml of water containing either 25 g D-xylose and 5 g polyethylene glycol (PEG 4000), or 100 g sucrose with 5 g PEG. Sucrose meals also contained 0, 100, or 200 mg of an inhibitor of alpha-glucosidase (BAYg5421). At the end of a 5-hr test period, the ratio of recovery of D-xylose relative to that of PEG indicated that 69% of D-xylose was absorbed. Five-hour urinary excretion of D-xylose was 31% of that ingested, or 45% of the D-xylose which was absorbed. Sucrose was recovered in ileal samples only when administered together with inhibitor. Rates of sucrose absorption with BAYg5421, 100 and 200 mg, were 75% and 65%, respectively. The perfusion technique of ERBI is a rapid and reproduceable approach to the distal small intestine of man which could be of value in the investigation of intestinal absorption.
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PMID:New method of testing for carbohydrate absorption in man. Xylose and sucrose absorption; effects of sucrase inhibition. 395 33

To determine whether zinc has a specific role on intestinal growth and function, three groups of male weanling Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a semipurified zinc-deficient diet: ad libitum fed group received powdered diet and water containing 25 ppm of zinc; force fed (ZN, ZD) groups were fed identical amounts of diet to the ad libitum fed group by intragastric infusion three times per day. The diets were aqueous suspensions made with either deionized water (ZD) or water containing 25 ppm of zinc (ZN), and additional drinking water with (ZN) or without zinc (ZD) was offered ad libitum. Rats were sacrificed after 8 days of feeding. The ZD group showed growth arrest, perioral and periorbital dermal lesions, and abdominal distention within 8 days of feeding. Mucosal DNA, protein, sucrase, maltase, lactase, leucine aminopeptidase, and alkaline phosphatase were significantly decreased in the ZD group, whereas intestinal length, weight, and mucosal weight were unaltered. These results suggest that short-term isolated zinc deficiency impairs growth, digestion, and absorption in the rat small intestine, even in the absence of associated protein calorie malnutrition.
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PMID:Effects of short-term isolated zinc deficiency on intestinal growth and activities of several brush border enzymes in weaning rats. 408 Apr 54

1. The maltase and glucoamylase activities of acid alpha-glucosidase purified from rabbit muscle exhibited marked differences in certain physicochemical properties. These included pH stability, inactivation by thiol-group reagents, inhibition by alphaalpha-trehalose, methyl alpha-d-glucoside, sucrose, turanose, polyols, glucono-delta-lactone and monosaccharides, pH optimum and the kinetics and pH-dependence of cation activation. 2. The results are interpreted in terms of the existence of at least two specific substrate-binding sites or sub-sites. One site is specific for the binding of maltose and probably other oligosaccharides. The second site binds polysaccharides such as glycogen. 3. The sites appear to be in close proximity, since glycogen and maltose are mutually inhibitory substrates and interact directly in transglucosylation reactions. 4. Acid alpha-glucosidase exhibited intrinsic transglucosylase activity. The enzyme catalysed glucosyl-transfer reactions from [(14)C]maltose (donor substrate) to polysaccharides (glycogen and pullulan) and to maltose itself (disproportionation). The pH optimum was 5.1, with a shoulder or secondary activity peak at pH5.4. The glucose transferred to glycogen was attached by alpha-1,4- and alpha-1,6-linkages. Three major oligosaccharide products of enzyme action on maltose (disproportionation) were detected. 5. The kinetics of enzyme action on [(14)C]maltose showed that the rate of transglucosylation increased in a sigmoidal fashion as a function of substrate concentration, approximately in parallel with a decrease in the rate of glucose release. 6. The results are interpreted to imply competitive interaction at a specific binding site between maltose and water as glucosyl acceptors. 7. The results are discussed in terms of the possible existence of multiple subgroups of glycogen-storage disease type II.
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PMID:The maltase, glucoamylase and transglucosylase activities of acid -glucosidase from rabbit muscle. 528 98

There was a significant depression of the activities of intestinal lactase, invertase, and alkaline phosphatase in rats given drinking water containing 2.5 mg of colchicine per 100 ml. Activities of intestinal maltase, aspartate transcarbamylase, and dihydroorotase were not affected by the drug. Injection of colchicine (1 mg/kg) caused depression of intestinal invertase activity within 8 hr. Investigation of the effect of colchicine on the disaccharides in vitro demonstrated that invertase and maltase were not affected by concentrations up to 125 mg/100 ml. Intestinal lactase was inhibited by concentrations exceeding 5 mg/100 ml. Calculation of the concentration of colchicine present in the intestine, after a single injection, indicated that the in vivo effect of colchicine was not due to simple enzyme inhibition. Histological examination showed an increase in crypt cells but no decrease in the length of the villi. Cellular migration along the villi, as well as activity of uridine kinase in intestinal mucosa, was increased in colchicine-treated rats. It was concluded that colchicine did not depress intestinal invertase, lactase, and alkaline phosphatase by decreasing cellular renewal, but rather it exerted its effect directly on the differentiated cells of the villus.
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PMID:Effect of colchicine on intestinal disaccharidases: correlation with biochemical aspects of cellular renewal. 541 79

Four pigs initially of 30 kg live weight were surgically prepared with two re-entrant cannulas in the jejunum 1.0 m apart which allowed an isolated loop to be formed through which solutions were perfused. 51Cr-EDTA was used as a marker for measuring net secretion or absorption. A new Ringer solution was made, the ionic content of which resembled more closely that found in the jejunum of pigs given similar diets, than Krebs-Ringer solution. The absorption of glucose and water from Krebs-Ringer and new Ringer solutions was compared. The effect of guar gum on the absorption of glucose and water from solutions of glucose and maltose was studied. There was a trend (not significant) for greater absorption of glucose and water from the new Ringer solution than from the Krebs-Ringer solution. Guar gum significantly reduced the net absorption of glucose from glucose or maltose solutions from 74.2 to 41.4% (P less than 0.001) and 71.1 to 35.0% (P less than 0.001) respectively. Guar gum significantly reduced the net absorption of water from the glucose solution from 42.7 to 8.3% (P less than 0.01) and from the maltose solution from 49.2 to 5.1% (P less than 0.001). The lack of differences between the absorption of glucose from solutions of glucose or maltose suggested that maltase (EC 3.2.1.20) activity was not inhibited to the extent that this limited the rate of glucose absorption.
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PMID:Effect of guar gum on glucose and water absorption from isolated loops of jejunum in conscious growing pigs. 609 55

An enzymatic assay for the determination of alpha-amylase in serum was developed which employed a soluble substrate, maltoheptaose, and a coupled enzymatic indicator reaction consisting of alpha-glucosidase and the hexokinase-glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase system. We used high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) to establish the action pattern of maltoheptaose under the test conditions: (A) the action pattern of alpha-amylase, (B) that of the combined action of alpha-amylase and alpha-glucosidase. Conductive to this effect was: the availability of pure maltoheptaose and human pancreatic alpha-amylase; the development of an adequate procedure for sample pretreatment (partition chromatography on a mixed-bed ion exchange) and of an HPLC system for separation of substrate and reaction products without interference from by products of the assay (partition chromatography on a cation-exchange column with acetonitrile-water); and the use of a new, very sensitive refractometric detector revealing sugar amounts as low as 40 ng. We derived the following stoichiometric equations: (see formula index).
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PMID:Action pattern of human pancreatic alpha-amylase on maltoheptaose, a substrate for determining alpha-amylase in serum. 616 29

We have studied some characteristics of alpha-1,4-glucosidases in human male reproductive organs in order to obtain information on the origin of the enzyme in seminal plasma. Acid and neutral enzymes could be distinguished on the basis of their selective inhibition either by SDS (acid enzyme) or MTT (neutral enzyme). Only the epididymis contained a significant amount of SDS resistant neutral alpha-1,4-glucosidase which was comparable to what has been isolated in seminal plasma. The similarity of epididymal and seminal plasma neutral enzymes was further confirmed by ultracentrifugation on sucrose density gradients, which permitted a complete separation of neutral (11S) and acid (4S) iso-enzymes. The 11S form was present in epididymis and in seminal plasma, but was totally absent in seminal vesicles, prostates and testis. The epididymal enzyme also had some of the unique characteristics found in the seminal plasma enzyme: it precipitated upon dialysis against distilled water, and its mobility on SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was identical to that of form 1 in seminal plasma. These results, although they do not constitute absolute proof of the identity of epididymal and seminal plasma alpha-glucosidase, certainly provide strong support for this hypothesis.
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PMID:Similar biochemical properties of human seminal plasma and epididymal alpha-1,4-glucosidase. 638 46

Human liver acid alpha-glucosidase (1,4-alpha-D-glucan glucohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.3) was modified with water soluble carbodiimide in the presence of p-aminophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside. The incorporation of the aminophenyl derivative of galactose into alpha-glucosidase caused some changes in the physiocochemical properties of the enzyme: a blue shift in the absorption maximum, an alteration of the total electric charge affecting electrophoretic mobility upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and acquisition of the ability to interact specifically with Ricinus communis agglutinin. At the same time, the 'galactosylated' enzyme possessed high stability and exhibited catalytic activity towards maltose. The Km values of the native and modified enzymes with maltose were 6 and 5 mM, respectively. p-Aminophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside residues incorporated in alpha-glucosidase and in other proteins were found to be antigenic determinants to which the pure antibodies were obtained.
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PMID:Human liver lysosomal alpha-glucosidase modified by chemical galactosylation and isolation of specific antibodies. 642 21

In vivo jejunal transport of amino acids, monosaccharides, sodium, and electrolytes were studied in rats made nephrotic with puromycin aminonucleoside (PAN) and in pair-fed controls. Studies were performed 14 days after a single intravenous dose of PAN when rats were no longer edematous, but were still hypoproteinemic. There was decreased absorption of glucose, 3-0-methyl glucose, glycine, phenylalanine, histidine, water, and sodium in the nephrotic animals but transport of fructose, lysine and potassium was similar in the nephrotic and control animals. Enzyme kinetic studies for glucose transport showed a mixed type of inhibition affecting both Vm and Km. The jejunal mucosa of nephrotic and control rats had similar ATP content and enzyme activity for lactase, sucrase, maltase and (Na-K)-ATPase and the ratios of RNA to DNA were similar in the nephrotic and control rats. No abnormality of the jejunum was detected by light or electron microscopy. The data suggest that the impairment of absorption is a result of decreased activity of jejunal membrane carrier mechanisms. The altered transport may be secondary to effects related to the metabolic consequences of nephrotic syndrome and does not appear to be related to acute purine aminonucleoside toxicity, edema or malnutrition.
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PMID:Jejunal transport in experimental nephrotic syndrome. 662 9

Leukocytes were obtained from 14 healthy subjects, one patient with the infantile form, two patients with the adult variant of acid maltase deficiency, two patients with chronic myelocytic leukemia, two patients with acute myeloid leukemia, and two patients with chronic lymphotic leukemia. In addition, lymphocytes were prepared from three normal subjects, and five established lymphoid lines were used. Cells were extracted either with Triton 0, 2%, or with water followed by 0.2% Triton. alpha-Glucosidase activity was measured in water homogenates, water extracts after centrifugation, and Triton extracts, with or without antisera directed against acid maltase (EC 3.2.1.3) and renal maltase (EC 3.2.1.20). The percentage of acid and renal maltases was then calculated in each soluble fraction. Normal whole leukocytes (mostly granulocytes) contain both acid and "renal" maltases, whereas normal lymphocytes contain very little or no "renal maltase." This isozyme is present in chronic myelocytic leukemia, but is absent in acute myeloid and chronic lymphocytic leukemia as well as in established lymphoid lines. Acid maltase is almost completely extracted with water, whereas renal maltase is extracted only with Triton. From the results, it appears that for the diagnosis of alpha glucosidase deficiency, cells should be extracted in water and centrifuged before determination. Lymphocytes, which are devoid of renal maltase, are a better diagnostic material than are granulocytes.
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PMID:White blood cells and the diagnosis of alpha-glucosidase deficiency. 676 91


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