Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.26 (
invertase
)
4,927
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Juvenile white sturgeon were fed isonitrogenous diets containing 27.2% glucose, fructose, maltose, sucrose,
lactose
, dextrin, raw corn starch or cellulose for 8 wk. Growth, body composition, plasma chemistry (with the exception of glucose), and liver glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH, EC 1.1.1.49), malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40) and isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH, 1.1.1.42) activities of sturgeon were significantly (P less than 0.05) affected by the different dietary carbohydrate sources. Sturgeon fed either the maltose or glucose diets had the highest percent energy retained, followed by those fed either the dextrin, raw corn starch or sucrose diets, whereas those fed either the
lactose
, fructose or cellulose diets had the lowest. Sturgeon fed either the maltose or glucose diets were hyperlipidemic, having twice the amount of plasma total lipid, triacylglycerol and total cholesterol as fish fed the other carbohydrate sources. These two carbohydrate sources were also more lipogenic: maltose- or glucose-fed sturgeon had significantly higher body lipid and liver G6PDH, malic enzyme, and ICDH activities. The poor ability of sturgeon to utilize either sucrose or
lactose
appears to be due to low intestinal sucrase (EC 3.2.1.48) and lactase (EC 3.2.1.108) activities. Intestinal aminopeptidase (EC 3.4.11.11), maltase (EC 3.2.1.20),
sucrase
and lactase activities of sturgeon were not affected by feeding different carbohydrate sources for 8 wk.
...
PMID:Ability of juvenile white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) to utilize different carbohydrate sources. 272 21
To investigate further the pathophysiology of rotavirus-induced diarrhea, changes in specific activities of eight relevant intestinal enzymes [alkaline phosphatase, thymidine kinase, lactase, maltase,
sucrase
, Na+,K+-adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), adenylate and guanylate cyclases] were measured following infection of suckling mice with murine rotavirus (epizootic diarrhea of infant mouse strain) and compared with age-matched control mice. The concentration of
lactose
within the lumen of the gastrointestinal tract during infection was also measured. During the course of infection, activities of alkaline phosphatase and lactase decreased, whilst the activity of thymidine kinase increased. Precocious maturation profiles of
sucrase
and maltase enzymes were observed. No significant changes were detected in the activities of Na+,K+-ATPase or the adenylate and guanylate cyclases. These results are discussed in relation to existing and novel hypotheses on the pathogenesis of rotavirus-induced diarrhea.
...
PMID:Intestinal enzyme profiles in normal and rotavirus-infected mice. 289 74
The tests with
lactose
loading followed by the assay of blood sugar were conducted in 500 normal subjects, aged from 18 to 89 years, and 262 patients with gastro-intestinal diseases, aged from 25 to 55 years. When
lactose
malabsorption was detected, aspiration biopsy of the small intestine mucosa was performed followed by the study of the structure and the level of a number of disaccharidases (lactase, maltase,
saccharase
). Lactose malabsorption was detected in 72 (14.4%) out of 500 normal subjects (10.6%--aged 18-59, and 20%--aged 60-89 years), among them there were 12.5% of Russians, 13% of Byelorussians and 5.8% of Ukrainians (aged 25-55 years). The secondary
lactose
malabsorption was recorded in 44% of patients with ulcerative colitis, in 33% of patients with chronic enterocolitis, in 11.5% of patients with gastric ulcer, in 8% of those with duodenal ulcer, in 23.5% of patients with chronic gastritis attended by lowered secretory function, and in 8% of those with enhanced secretory function.
...
PMID:[Current problems of lactase deficiency]. 296 77
The effects of starvation on intestinal disaccharidase activities and disaccharide absorption were studied in rats. Adult male rats were starved for either 16 or 72 h and the specific activity of lactase and
sucrase
was determined together with the absorption of
lactose
, sucrose, and glucose in vitro by the everted sac technique. The specific activity of lactase was significantly higher and the specific activity of
sucrase
was lower in the 72-h starved animals when compared with the 16-h starved group. The higher specific lactase activity in the 72-h starved animals was reflected in enhanced absorption of
lactose
as determined by the transfer of the constituent monosaccharides into the serosal fluid. The transfer of glucose into the serosal fluid by the glucose sac was also higher in the 72-h starved rats but not to the same extent as that of
lactose
. The absorption of sucrose was not significantly different between the two groups of animals. This study shows that the increase of intestinal lactase activity induced by starvation of adult rats correlates with in vitro increased
lactose
absorption.
...
PMID:Dependency of lactose absorption on lactase activity in starved rats. 313 Jan 73
The aim of this study was to continue our previously published work and to compare the different indirect diagnostic methods for hypolactasia with the lactase to
sucrase
ratio obtained by jejunal biopsy. The following tests were performed in 63 adult patients: the breath hydrogen test, the
lactose
tolerance test with ethanol (serum galactose measurement after oral
lactose
load with ethanol), the urinary
lactose
tolerance test (urinary galactose measurement after oral
lactose
load with ethanol), and the strip test (like the former but using a special test strip for urinary galactose). Specificities of all these tests were good (96-98%). The 3-h breath hydrogen test was less sensitive (69%) than the other methods (81-94%). The strip test is recommended for the general practitioner for the diagnosis of this common cause of abdominal complaints.
...
PMID:Comparison of indirect diagnostic methods for hypolactasia. 313 52
The effect of inhibition of disaccharidases on the degree of absorption of glucose,
lactose
, and sucrose was examined utilizing an in vivo model in the rat. Acarbose, a competitive alpha-glucosidase inhibitor was utilized to selectively inhibit small intestinal mucosal enzymes. Adult rats (250-350 g body weight) were the subjects of intraduodenal bolus infusion experiments with either sugar alone or sugar plus acarbose. All sugars were infused at a dose of 0.5 g/kg body weight. Portal venous blood glucose was determined at 30-min intervals from 0 to 150 min. Glucose (monosaccharide) and
lactose
(beta-galactoside) absorption were not altered by the presence of acarbose. In contrast, sucrose (alpha-glucosidase) absorption was significantly diminished in the presence of acarbose. Sucrose absorption in the presence of increasing acarbose doses (0.7-5.6 mg/kg body weight) was depressed in a dose-dependent fashion. Linear regression analysis revealed a high degree of correlation between residual
sucrase
activity and area under blood glucose curve (r = 0.9837). Similar degrees of correlation were found between acarbose dose and area under blood glucose curve (r = -0.9322), and between residual
sucrase
activity and acarbose dose (r = -0.9695). These data confirm that acarbose is a selective alpha-glucosidase inhibitor that does not affect monosaccharidase transport. In the presence of acarbose, alpha-glucosidase absorption is diminished in a dose-dependent fashion. Postprandial glucose rise following an alpha-glucosidase meal seems to be determined, in the presence of graded acarbose inhibition, by residual mucosal alpha-glucosidase activity.
...
PMID:Effects of graded alpha-glucosidase inhibition on sugar absorption in vivo. 329 64
The effects of sucrose and corticosterone on the expression of intestinal sucrase activity in preweanling rat pups were studied using an artificial rearing (AR) technique. When AR rat pups were isocalorically fed diets containing
lactose
or sucrose, or a carbohydrate-free diet from d 12-16, jejunal and ileal
sucrase
and maltase activities were induced to similar levels in all AR rats, whereas ileal lactase activity was precociously decreased. In separate experiments, enzyme activities were measured in ileal isografts subcutaneously implanted in littermates at birth. In AR rats fed the
lactose
diet, these isografts showed
sucrase
and maltase activities comparable with those of host ileum and also to isografts from AR rats fed the sucrose diet. In contrast, lactase activity was significantly higher in isografts than host ileum in all AR rats. Serum corticosterone levels were significantly elevated in AR rats for 24 h after intragastric cannular implantation. Precocious expression of ileal
sucrase
activity occurred in corticosterone treated, but not in untreated, adrenalectomized AR rats. In conclusion, dietary sucrose has no specific role in enhancing intestinal sucrase activity, and endogenous corticosterone is responsible for the induction of
sucrase
activity in AR rats.
...
PMID:Endogenous corticosterone rather than dietary sucrose as a modulator for intestinal sucrase activity in artificially reared rat pups. 352 29
The sugars [14C]sucrose, [14C]
lactose
and [3H]raffinose have been loaded into isolated rat hepatocytes by means of electropermeabilisation, and used as probes of autophagic-lysosomal function. All three sugars are sequestered autophagically; in addition sucrose and
lactose
are taken up by mitochondria, and
lactose
is hydrolysed intralysosomally. Autophagically sequestered radioactivity accumulates in relatively large vacuoles (not in microsomes). These vacuoles initially have a density which, on average, is lower than that of the lysosomes. With time, the lysosomes become lighter and coincident with the radioactive vacuoles in density gradients, a phenomenon that is partially prevented by the autophagy inhibitor 3-methyladenine (3MA). This may indicate that resting, dense lysosomes become active (light) by engaging in autophagy as well as in other processes (endocytosis?). To assess the extent of convergence of the autophagic and endocytic pathways, the effect of endocytosed
invertase
on autophagically sequestered sucrose has been investigated. Practically all of the sucrose is eventually degraded the enzyme, indicating a complete intermixing of autophagic and endocytic pathways at the level of the lysosome. The density of lysosomes can be increased by treatment of cells with leupeptin. Most of the vaculoes containing sequestered radioactivity also increase their density under these conditions, even in the presence of vinblastine, an inhibitor of autophagosome-lysosome fusion. This indicates that a substantial fraction of the autophagosomes may be physically associated with lysosomes prior to fusion, a hypothesis supported by electron microscopic observations. Both autophagic sequestration (of raffinose) and autophagic-lysosomal degradation (of
lactose
, measured by an HPLC method) is completely inhibited by 3MA, whereas endocytic-lysosomal degradation (of asialofetuin) is unaffected. Since endogenous protein degradation is only partially (70%) suppressed by 3MA, it is clear that the remaining degradation must be non-autophagic (non-sequestrational), and most likely non-lysosomal.
...
PMID:Radiolabelled sugars as probes of hepatocytic autophagy. 357 83
Intestinal lactase activity is maintained at high levels in suckling rats during the first 2 wk after birth. When 12-day-old rat pups were either mother fed (MF) or artificially reared (AR) with natural rat milk or several artificial formulas, the small intestines had gained similar weight in all animal groups by 16 days except in AR rats fed a chemically defined formula. In the ileum, villus length was similar in MF and AR rats, but crypt depth was significantly higher in all groups of AR rats. Ileal absorptive cells in both MF and AR rats showed immature characteristics, including supranuclear vacuoles, apical tubular systems, and pinocytotic vesicles. Jejunal lactase specific activity and total intestinal lactase activity were significantly higher in AR rats fed rat milk than MF rats at 16 days. Ileal lactase specific activity was similar in these two animal groups. In contrast, AR rats fed artificial formulas supplemented with either glucose or
lactose
as the sole carbohydrate source exhibited significantly lower ileal lactase specific activity and total intestinal lactase activity than MF rats. Intestinal
sucrase
activity was prematurely elevated in all AR rats, even when fed natural rat milk. Addition of prolactin (3.3 micrograms/ml) to an artificial formula did not prevent the premature decrease in intestinal lactase specific and total activities in AR rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Rat milk maintains intestinal lactase activity in rat pups whereas artificial formulas do not. 393 Oct 42
To characterize the mechanisms leading to dietary evoked increases of lactase and
sucrase
activities by carbohydrates, we performed a quantitative comparison of the effects of
lactose
and sucrose on the corresponding disaccharidases in the jejunum of 2-month-old rats. For 7-10 days the rats were fed a low-starch (5 cal%), high-fat (73 cal%) diet, and for various periods of time (3-72 h) were given an isocaloric sucrose or
lactose
(20, 40, or 70 cal%) diet. Lactase and
sucrase
activities in jejunal homogenates were significantly increased within 3 h after the initial feeding of the sucrose (40 cal%) diet. After 3 h of feeding the sucrose diet,
sucrase
activity gradually increased and reached its maximum at 24 h, whereas lactase activity did not exhibit further change. Increased intake of sucrose led to an increase of lactase and
sucrase
activity. Within a range of doses of digestible amounts of
lactose
, the effect of diet containing
lactose
on these disaccharidase activities was similar to the effect of the diet containing sucrose. This similarity suggests the important role of the common constituent sugar, i.e., glucose. Further, analyses of response to these disaccharides along the villus-crypt axis revealed that the increase of lactase activity occurs at a more apical and broader locus of cohort of epithelial cells along the height of the villus than that of
sucrase
, suggesting that different mechanisms are involved in dietary regulation of lactase and
sucrase
.
...
PMID:Dietary regulation of intestinal lactase and sucrase in adult rats: quantitative comparison of effect of lactose and sucrose. 393 60
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>