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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (
beta-galactosidase
)
14,648
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Small-intestinal disaccharidase activities of eight suckling T. vulpecula, aged from 34 to 150 days, and of two adult animals were investigated. Intestinal maltase, isomaltase and sucrase activities increased with age, whereas
lactase
activities decreased. Trehalase activities were relatively high in all animals and showed no obvious age-related changes. Three separate
beta-galactosidase
activities, one neutral and two acid, acted on lactose. The neutral
beta-galactosidase
activity appeared to be due to a brush border enzyme similar to that of eutherian mammals, whereas the acid beta-galactosidases were soluble and probably of lysosomal origin. One of these, acid
beta-galactosidase
-1, had similar properties to the sole intestinal
beta-galactosidase
of macropodid marsupials, whereas the other, acid
beta-galactosidase
-2, has not previously been described. Galactosyl oligosaccharides isolated from macropodid milk were readily hydrolysed by both acid beta-galactosidases but not by the neutral
beta-galactosidase
. The total intestinal
lactase
activity in animals aged up to 125 days was due mainly to acid
beta-galactosidase
-1, whereas in older animals it was due mostly to the neutral
beta-galactosidase
; this suggests that late in lactation the young T. vulpecula change from a macropodid mode of digestion of galactosyl oligosaccharides to a eutherian mechanism for the digestion of lactose. These findings may have implications for the hand-rearing of orphaned T. vulpecula.
...
PMID:Intestinal lactase (beta-galactosidase) and other disaccharidase activities of suckling and adult common brushtail possums, Trichosurus vulpecula (Marsupialia:Phalangeridae). 251 66
The inhibitory action and mechanism of inhibition of two types of alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, acarbose (Bay-g-5421) and 1-deoxynojirimycin derivatives (Bay-m-1099 and Bay-o-1248), on small intestinal carbohydrases (sucrase, isomaltase, glucoamylase, trehalase and
lactase
) and pancreatic alpha-amylase were compared in vitro using small intestinal brush border membranes and pancreatic homogenates from adult Sprague-Dawley rats. Acarbose at a low (4 microM) concentration strongly inhibited the activities of glucoamylase, alpha-amylase and sucrase (98, 68, and 63%, respectively). At a high (200 microM) concentration, isomaltase activity was also inhibited (28%); effects on trehalase and
lactase
activities were negligible. Both the 1-deoxynojirimycin derivatives were even more potent inhibitors of sucrase (Ki = 8.6 x 10(-8) M for Bay-m-1099;Ki = 5.0 X 10(-8) M for Bay-o-1248) than acarbose (Ki = 9.9 x 10(-7) M). Whereas glucoamylase activity was strongly inhibited by the 1-deoxynojirimycin derivatives, alpha-amylase activity was not. In contrast to acarbose, the 1-deoxynojirimycin derivatives at high concentrations (20-200 microM) inhibited considerably trehalase and
lactase
(a
beta-galactosidase
) activities. The inhibition of
lactase
activity was stronger by Bay-m-1099 (Ki = 4.9 X 10(-6) M) than by Bay-o-1248 (Ki = 6.7 X 10(-5) M). Where inhibition was seen, kinetic analysis showed fully competitive inhibition of sucrase, isomaltase, trehalase, glucoamylase and
lactase
by all three inhibitors.
...
PMID:Inhibitory mechanism of acarbose and 1-deoxynojirimycin derivatives on carbohydrases in rat small intestine. 296 44
To evaluate the response of the small intestinal mucosa to Saccharomyces boulardii (S.b.), a yeast widely used in some countries as an adjuvant drug with oral antimicrobial therapy, seven healthy adult volunteers were treated with high doses of lyophilized S.b. (250 mg four times per day) for 2 wk. A peroral jejunal suction biopsy was performed on days 0 and 15 of the study. Compared to the initial biopsy, histological examination of the posttrial biopsy revealed no morphological alteration nor change in villus height or crypt depth. After treatment, the specific activity (per U protein) of sucrase,
lactase
, and maltase was, respectively, increased by 82% (p less than 0.05) 77% (p less than 0.05), and 75% (p less than 0.05) over the basal activity of the enzymes measured on day 0, whereas mucosal protein content remained unchanged. Similar findings were found in the jejunum of adult rats treated for 5 days with either viable or killed S.b. cells. The changes in total enzyme activity (per jejunal segment) paralleled the changes in specific enzyme activity. In vitro assays on freshly prepared suspensions of S.b. (6.0 X 10(8) viable cells/ml) evidenced a high activity for sucrase (mean +/- SE: 8 364 +/- 1280 U X g X protein-1) but no maltase, neutral
lactase
, acid
beta-galactosidase
, or aminopeptidase activity. To determine whether treatment with S.b. could influence the incorporation rate of neutral
lactase
into the brush border membrane, 14-day-old sucklings treated either with saline or with S.b. were given intraperitoneally a dose of 20 microCi D-[1(14)C] glucosamine 3 hours before sacrifice.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Response of human and rat small intestinal mucosa to oral administration of Saccharomyces boulardii. 308 Jul 30
The activities of the enterocyte brush border enzymes
lactase
(beta-D galactoside galactohydrolase,
EC 3.2.1.23
) and sucrase (sucrose alpha-D glucohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.48) were measured at set percentage lengths along the small intestines of 112 piglets killed between 21 and 32 days of age. The influences on these activities of consumption of creep feed and of weaning were recorded. Weaning at three weeks old resulted in large, rapid reductions in
lactase
activity at most sites along the small intestine; sucrase activity declined temporarily and then recovered. Minimum values were recorded about four to five days after weaning. Similar changes were observed whether or not creep feed was consumed before weaning. Continued consumption of creep feed by unweaned pigs over the 21 to 32 day period also produced small but significant reductions in
lactase
activities. The large loss of digestive enzyme activities at brush borders in weaned animals coincided with a reduced ability to absorb xylose and to checks in growth rate in otherwise healthy piglets.
...
PMID:Influence of creep feeding and weaning on brush border enzyme activities in the piglet small intestine. 308 80
Hydrocortisone administration to infant rats enhanced cellobiase and maltase activities and induced precocious expression of sucrase and trehalase activities along the length of the small intestine. These activity changes reflected proportional concentration increases in the enzymes
lactase
(
EC 3.2.1.23
), maltase/glucoamylase (EC 3.2.1.20) and sucrase-isomaltase (EC 3.2.1.48/10). Administration of an equivalent tracer dose of [3H]leucine (by body weight) to control and hydrocortisone-treated infant rats resulted in greater accumulation of label in the carbohydrase pools of the treated rats, suggesting their increased de novo synthesis. The increased concentrations of
lactase
and maltase/glucoamylase induced by exogenous hydrocortisone were matched by the presence of corresponding greater amounts of label in their brush border pools. Accumulation of label in each of the
lactase
, maltase/glucoamylase and sucrase-isomaltase pools was generally similar in the hydrocortisone-treated rats, suggesting equivalent stimulation of their synthesis as a group by the humoral agent. The turnover rates of the carbohydrases as a group were found to be similar and did not appear to differ in control and hydrocortisone-treated rats. Total protein synthesis rates were slightly greater in the intestine of the hydrocortisone-treated group of rats.
...
PMID:Effects of hydrocortisone on carbohydrase concentrations, de novo synthesis and turnover patterns in immature rat intestine. 308 73
Exogenous, microbial beta-D-galactosidases are capable of effecting hydrolysis of lactose in situ in the gastrointestinal tract of
lactase
-deficient subjects when given as replacement therapy at mealtime. As its digestion products-glucose and galactose-are known to inhibit lactose hydrolysis in vitro, the effect of adding excess monosaccharide to milk on the hydrolytic efficiency of a
beta-galactosidase
from Aspergillus niger in adult lactose-malabsorbers was tested. Subjects were studied with 360-ml volumes of milk containing 18 g of carbohydrate. This was administered as intact milk, as lactose-prehydrolyzed milk, and as milk to which 399 mg of Lactase N was added within 5 minutes of consumption. This latter Lactase N-treated milk was administered alone and with graded levels of glucose-9, 18, and 36 g-and with similar doses of galactose. The Lactase N enzyme alone at mealtime reduced breath H2 production by 68% as compared to intact milk. The addition of monosaccharides produced no change in the apparent hydrolytic efficiency of the Lactase N in situ. Thus, product inhibition is unlikely to be the basis for the limited efficiency of intraintestinal hydrolysis of milk lactose by the enzyme from A niger.
...
PMID:The effect of the digestion products of lactose (glucose and galactose) on its intraintestinal, in vivo hydrolysis by exogenous microbial beta-D-galactosidase. 309 Jan 30
The biosynthesis and maturation of the human intestinal
lactase-phlorizin hydrolase
(LPH;
EC 3.2.1.23
-3.2.1.62) has been studied in cultured intestinal biopsies and mucosal explants. Short time pulse labelling revealed on high mannose intermediate of Mr 215,000 which was converted upon endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H (endo-H) digestion to a polypeptide of Mr 200,000. The brush border form of LPH was revealed after longer pulse periods and has Mr 160,000. It possesses mainly complex oligosaccharide chains and, owing to its partial endo-H sensitivity, at least one chain of the high mannose type. Leupeptin partially inhibited the appearance of the Mr-160,000 polypeptide. Monensin treatment of biopsies resulted in the modification of the Mr-160,000 species to the Mr-140,000 molecule, which was endo-H sensitive. Pulse-chase analysis indicated a slow post-translational processing of the high mannose precursor (Mr 215,000) to yield the mature brush-border form (Mr 160,000) of LPH. Our results further indicate that LPH is synthesized as a single polypeptide precursor which is intracellularly cleaved to yield the mature brush border of LPH. The data presented suggest that this cleavage occurs during the translocation of the molecule across the Golgi complex.
...
PMID:Biosynthesis and maturation of lactase-phlorizin hydrolase in the human small intestinal epithelial cells. 310 75
Human
lactase
was isolated from solubilized small-intestinal brush-border membranes by a combination of chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose, Bio-Gel 1.5m and chromatofocusing, with a yield of approx. 1% and a 750-fold purification. The enzyme appeared to be homogeneous on SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis under both reduced and non-reduced conditions, with an apparent Mr of approx. 170,000. On gel filtration, however, it displayed an apparent Mr of approx. 380,000. The protein had a pI of 4.8, as judged by the chromatofocusing experiment, and had a
lactase
activity whose optimum is at pH 6.0. In addition to the
beta-galactosidase
activity, the protein also hydrolysed to various extents cellobiose, phlorizin, p-nitrophenyl beta-D-galactoside, p-nitrophenyl beta-D-glucoside, o-nitrophenyl beta-D-galactoside and o-nitrophenyl beta-D-fucoside. Antisera had been raised against the purified enzyme in two rabbits. One of the antibody populations could inhibit the enzyme in a concentration-dependent manner. This antibody population was used to set up an antibody-bound Sepharose column for the use in an immunoaffinity purification of
lactase
from crude intestinal homogenate. A partially purified preparation of
lactase
could thus be obtained. The antibody population was also used to set up a radioimmunoassay for quantifying the enzyme. The competition assay could detect about 0.5 micrograms of
lactase
protein/ml.
...
PMID:Physicochemical characterization of human intestinal lactase. 310 78
Lactose digestion from and tolerance to flavored and frozen yogurts, ice cream, and ice milk were evaluated (20 g lactose/meal) in
lactase
-deficient subjects by use of breath hydrogen techniques. Unflavored yogurt caused significantly less hydrogen production than milk (37 vs 185 delta ppm X h, n = 9). Flavored yogurt was intermediate (77 delta ppm X h). Subjects were free of symptoms after consuming flavored and unflavored yogurts. Of seven commercial yogurts tested, all contained significant levels of microbial
beta-galactosidase
(beta-gal). In addition, eight subjects were fed meals of milk, ice milk, ice cream, and frozen yogurts with and without cultures containing high levels of beta-gal. Peak hydrogen excretion after consumption of frozen yogurt with high beta-gal was less than one-half of that observed after the other five test meals and intolerance symptoms were absent. Tolerance to frozen yogurt, produced under usual commercial procedures, was found to be similar to that of ice milk and ice cream.
...
PMID:Lactose digestion from flavored and frozen yogurts, ice milk, and ice cream by lactase-deficient persons. 311 36
1. Neutral
beta-galactosidase
(
lactase
) activity was absent from crude brush borders of small intestines of three species of suckling macropods (kangaroos and wallabies), even though the intestinal mucosal homogenates had high
beta-galactosidase
activities. 2. These activities were entirely due to an intracellular acid
beta-galactosidase
, probably located in lysosomes. 3. The results suggest that the absorptive-digestive mechanism for lactose in macropods is fundamentally different from that in eutherian mammals.
...
PMID:Absence of beta-galactosidase (lactase) activity from intestinal brush borders of suckling macropods: implications for mechanism of lactose absorption. 312 29
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