Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.26 (invertase)
4,927 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The gastric emptying of maltose, sucrose, lactose and lactulose was compared in young adult rats with ontogenic lactase deficiency. Eight animals were employed for each sugar meal at each time of study (total number of animals = 192). Each animal received a test meal consisting of a solution of the sugar (100 mg/ml) and phenol red as marker and gastric retention was measured at 5, 10, 20, 30, 45 and 60 min after orogastric infusion of the test meal. Gastric retention was determined by measuring the concentration of the marker in the residual test meal recovered from the stomach after killing the animal. There was no difference between the gastric emptying of lactose and lactulose. The gastric emptying of maltose was significantly slower during the initial 30 min and the emptying of sucrose was identical to that of maltose only at 5 min and could not be distinguished from that of lactose and lactulose at later times. These data support the observation, made in human subjects, that, under conditions of ontogenic lactase deficiency, the modulation of gastric emptying of lactose is ineffective. It is possible that the rapid emptying of sucrose is due to the saturation of sucrase because of substrate overload which impairs the intestinal inhibitory control of gastric emptying.
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PMID:Gastric emptying of maltose, sucrose, lactose and lactulose in rats with ontogenic lactase deficiency. 182 68

The gastric emptying of sucrose and maltose solutions at different concentrations, with addition of phenol red (6 mg%) used as a marker, was studied in 144 Wistar male rats. The gastric retention was determined 15 minutes after the orogastric infusion of sucrose and maltose solutions at 2.5%, 5% and 10% and volume of 1 and 2 ml/100 g weight of the animal, making 1 use of 12 rats for each volume and concentration. The activities of lactase, sucrase and maltase were evaluated in other eight rat's small intestine. The results demonstrated a maltase/sucrase activity rate of 4:1. The gastric retentions of the maltose solution were significantly higher than sucrose solution at 10% and 5% concentration, either 1 and 2 ml/100 g weight. There were no differences between gastric retention at 2.5% concentration neither with 2 nor 1 ml/100 g weight. As an explanation of these results it is proposed that the faster gastric emptying of sucrose solution 10% and 5% in relation with the same concentrations of maltose is due to a probable saturation of sucrase, that when achieved, interrupts the regulation of gastric emptying, determined by the intestinal receptors.
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PMID:[Gastric emptying of sucrose and maltose and levels of respective disaccharidases in the small intestinal mucosa of adult rats]. 787 66