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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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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)
Experiments in order to induce food allergy were carried out in guinea pigs. The sensitization with egg albumin, pasteurized cow milk and bovine serum albumin provoked anaphylactic shock. The passive cutaneous
anaphylaxis
, serum antibodies, liver cytochrome P-450 concentration and the anaphylactic shock were determined. Some correlation between the mortality, anaphylactic antibodies and cytochrome P-450 monooxygenase system was established. The morphology of the jejunal mucosa, the activities of the 5 disaccharidases, the number of immunoglobulin secreting cells (Ig SC) and the mastocytes were investigated in 35 patients with food allergy. Normal mucosa was found in 28 cases as well as a significant decrease of the lactase,
sucrase
and trehalase activities. An increase of IgM and IgG secreting cells and of mastocytes, different electron microscopic changes in the enterocytes (an increased number of lysosomes, appearance of vesicles in cytoplasma, shortening, enlargement and uneven distribution of microvilli) as well as symptoms of functional activity in the plasmocytes and some others were also revealed. The experimental model obtained is similar to that one in humans according to the enteral way of sensitization the high selectivity of the allergic reaction which is of reagin type as the immunoglobulin changes are involved.
...
PMID:Immunological and radioimmunological studies in food allergy. 295 46
The aim of the present study was to create clearly documented immediate-type allergy to food protein in the intestine of rats and to study some pathophysiological phenomena induced by challenge with the allergen. To achieve this, rats were sensitized with ovalbumin. A passive cutaneous
anaphylaxis
reaction to ovalbumin was negative in all controls and positive in all test animals when Bordetella pertussis was used as adjuvant. Sixty minutes after an intravenous injection of 125I-human serum albumin and 45 min after an ovalbumin challenge, given by gavage, the rats were sacrificed. The intestine was removed and sections taken for morphologic studies. The remainder was rinsed, opened, cut into measured segments, weighed, and the radioactivity was measured. Disaccharidases, alkaline phosphatase, and protein were estimated in homogenates of epithelium. Results in both control and test animals showed that radioactivity decreased as one moved distally along the intestine. However, radioactivity was significantly higher (p less than 0.01) in the intestine of test animals than in controls. Radioactivity in liver, kidney, spleen, and lungs was identical in test and control animals. There was significant reduction in levels of alkaline phosphatase (p varied from less than 0.05 to less than 0.001), maltase (p less than 0.05), and
sucrase
(p less than 0.05 to less than 0.01). Lactase activity in contrast was significantly raised (p less than 0.05). There was no change in intestinal morphology or in the intestinal mast cell count.
...
PMID:The effect of immediate-type gastrointestinal allergic reactions on brush border enzymes and gut morphology in the rat. 392 23
The effects of immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated reactions on the intestinal epithelium were examined during intestinal
anaphylaxis
in the rat. Rats sensitized by intraperitoneal injection of egg albumin (EA) plus alum developed high serum titers of IgE anti-EA antibodies after 14 days; sham-treated littermate controls had no anti-EA antibodies. Two isolated loops of jejunum were prepared in vivo in anesthetized rats. The loops were injected with EA in saline or saline alone, and intraluminal contents of each loop were examined after 4 h. Mucosal histamine decreased in sensitized rat intestine exposed to EA. Luminal mucin, measured by radioimmunoassay, was not increased by antigen challenge. In contrast, DNA, protein, and
sucrase
activities were elevated in contents from the isolated segments exposed to EA in sensitized rats. Histology revealed that periodic acid-Schiff-stained material was contained in goblet cells in sections prepared from these segments after antigen exposure. Cellular debris was present over the tips of the villi. These findings suggest that IgE-mediated reactions in the intestine cause epithelial damage and loss of material from cells other than goblet cells. The results indicate that release of goblet cell mucus is not a feature of intestinal
anaphylaxis
.
...
PMID:Epithelial response to intestinal anaphylaxis in rats: goblet cell secretion and enterocyte damage. 650 19
Mucin secretion was examined in three functional models relevant to human disease, using rat small intestinal rings or in situ loops, [3H]glucosamine precursor labelling, gel chromatography and a specific radioimmunoassay for mucin. As a model for acute bacterial secretory diarrhoea, tissues were exposed to cholera toxin for up to 4 h. Both stored and newly synthesized radioactive glycoproteins were secreted in amounts twofold to threefold above control levels. Immunoreactive mucin secretion increased fivefold to eightfold. Other agents known to raise cAMP levels did not stimulate mucin secretion, suggesting that cholera may release mucin by a non-cAMP-dependent mechanism. Sepharose 2B chromatography indicated that secreted mucin was smaller in size than intracellular mucin and had compositional differences suggestive of 'immaturity' or protein contamination. In chronically (seven days) reserpinized rats, used as a model of glycoprotein abnormalities relevant to cystic fibrosis, mucin secretion increased twofold to threefold, but the most prominent abnormality was a marked increase in [3H]glucosamine incorporation into all tissue glycoproteins. On purification, the intracellular mucin of reserpine-treated rats had the same composition as mucin from control rats, but the former was smaller in size and had a higher specific radioactivity. Mucin hypersecretion in reserpinized rats may therefore be secondary to a primary and chronic hyperstimulation of mucin biosynthesis. A model of intestinal '
anaphylaxis
' or immune-mediated diarrhoea was created in Hooded Lister rats by immunizing with egg albumin (10 micrograms) and challenging with the same antigen in intestinal loops 14 days later. After 4 h, total protein, DNA and brush border
sucrase
were increased in the lumen. Enhancement of mucin secretion did not occur, however, and therefore does not seem to be a particular feature of the pathophysiology of this model.
...
PMID:Acute and chronic models for hypersecretion of intestinal mucin. 656 39