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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)
In this paper, we analyze the factors involved in the precocious increase of
sucrase
activity evoked by the early feeding of sucrose in suckling rats, and particularly, the role of diarrhea and stress in this phenomenon. Ten-day-old rats were removed from their mothers and gavage fed for 4 days at 3-h intervals either a basic low carbohydrate milk formula (10.8% fat, 8% protein, 1.4% carbohydrate; all by weight/volume) or basic low carbohydrate milk with:
lactose
(13%), fructose (13%), or Polycose (2%, 6%, or 13%); all formulas were isocaloric. Feeding the formula containing fructose or high (13%) Polycose led to diarrhea and evoked a concurrent increase of small intestinal sucrase activity. In further experiments, 11-day-old rats were fed the basic formula, the
lactose
(13%), the fructose (13%), and a sucrose (13%) formula for 8 h between 2 a.m. and 10 a.m. Also, 10-day-old rats were fed 0.5 ml of a solution of 5% mannitol in water while nursing with their mothers. The serum corticosterone levels were substantially increased within 8 h after the initiation of feedings with sucrose and fructose milks and the mannitol solution. The mannitol-fed rats also developed diarrhea within a day in association with a marked increase in
sucrase
activity. We conclude that a precocious increase of
sucrase
activity in the small intestine of suckling rats by dietary sugars is not caused by substrate induction, but is mainly due to the effect of stress. The stress is caused by diarrhea which is evoked by the feeding of indigestible and/or unabsorbable amounts of sugar.
...
PMID:Precocious increase of sucrase activity by carbohydrates in the small intestine of suckling rats. I. Significance of the stress effect of sugar-induced diarrhea. 404 May 66
1. Glucose oxidase (EC 1.1.3.4), amyloglucosidase (EC 3.2.1.3),
invertase
(
EC 3.2.1.26
) and beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23) were covalently attached via glutaraldehyde to the inside surface of nylon tube. 2. The linked enzyme system, comprising
invertase
immobilized within a nylon tube acting in series with glucose oxidase immobilized in a similar way, was used for the automated determination of sucrose. 3. The linked enzyme system, comprising beta-galactosidase immobilized within a nylon tube acting in series with glucose oxidase immobilized in a similar way, was used for the automated determination of
lactose
. 4. The linked enzyme system, comprising amyloglucosidase immobilized within a nylon tube acting in series with glucose oxidase immobilized in a similar way, was used for the automated determination of maltose. 5. Mixtures of glucose oxidase and amyloglucosidase were immobilized within the same piece of nylon tube and used for the automated determination of maltose. 6. Mixtures of glucose oxidase and
invertase
were immobilized within the same piece of nylon tube and used for the automated determination of sucrose.
...
PMID:Preparation of some immobilized linked enzyme systems and their use in the automated determination of disaccharides. 420 8
Whole cells of Actinomyces naeslundii ATCC 12104, either in a dispersed form or in the form of plaque, enzymatically degraded sucrose to glucose and fructose. Washed whole cells expressed
beta-fructofuranosidase
specificity and hydrolyzed sucrose to essentially equimolar quantities of glucose and fructose. The cells readily hydrolyzed sucrose, raffinose, and Actinomyces viscosus or Aerobacter levanicum levan, but did not degrade melezitose, maltose, alpha-methyl-d-glucoside, melibiose, glucose-1-phosphate, or dextran T-500. Sucrose degradation occurred at a temperature optimum of 37 to 45 C and at a pH optimum of 5.7 to 6.0. The K(m) for sucrose was 0.05 M. Sucrose or raffinose in the growth medium resulted in cells with a specific activity that was fivefold greater than that of cells grown in medium supplemented with either glucose, fructose, maltose,
lactose
, or glucose and fructose, or grown in unsupplemented medium. Addition of sucrose to log-phase cells growing in glucose also increased the specific activity. Degradation of sucrose by whole cells in the form of plaque also occurred, but 6% less free fructose than free glucose was recovered. Sucrose-dependent synthesis of extracellular levan or glucan by whole cells or plaque could not be demonstrated. The ability of A. naeslundii to degrade sucrose and levan may be related to the pathogenic potential of this bacterium in plaque-associated oral diseases.
...
PMID:Degradation of sucrose by whole cells and plaque of Actinomyces naeslundii. 461 24
Diarrhoea is a common sequel to vagotomy and pyloroplasty but its cause is unknown. One of our patients who developed this complication had an abnormal
lactose
barium meal and responded well to a
lactose
-free diet. This led us to make a systematic study of disaccharidase activity in the small intestine in patients with diarrhoea following vagotomy and pyloroplasty. The small-intestinal disaccharidases have been estimated in jejunal biopsy specimens taken from 23 patients suffering from persistent diarrhoea, either continuous or episodic, after vagotomy and pyloroplasty. The disaccharidase values were normal in all but one of these patients. This patient showed hypolactasia but the
sucrase
and maltase levels were normal. The jejunal biopsy specimen taken from this patient showed a convoluted pattern under the dissecting microscope and severe partial villous atrophy under the light microscope. A repeat jejunal biopsy taken 20 cm beyond the duodeno-jejunal flexure showed similar appearances and also had a low level of lactase. However, two
lactose
tolerance tests and a
lactose
barium meal yielded normal results, suggesting that the low level of lactase in the upper jejunum was not a limiting factor in
lactose
absorption. The finding of one example of a low lactase level among 23 postvagotomy patients corresponds with what is being found in a study of normal subjects at present in progress. In effect, almost all patients with persistent diarrhoea after vagotomy and pyloroplasty have normal small-intestinal disaccharidase activity.
...
PMID:Disaccharidase levels in the small intestine in patients with diarrhoea following vagotomy and pyloroplasty. 554 54
The specific effect of dietary sugars on jejunal disaccharidase activity in seven normal nonfasted male volunteers was studied. The sugars tested were sucrose, maltose,
lactose
, glucose, fructose, and galactose. Comparisons were made of the effects of each sugar in an isocaloric liquid diet. In all subjects, sucrose feeding, as compared to glucose feeding, significantly increased jejunal
sucrase
(S) and maltase (M) activities, but not lactase (L) activity. The S/L and M/L ratios increased to a significant degree. Fructose feeding, in two subjects, gave results similar to sucrose when comparing fructose and glucose diets. One subject was fed
lactose
, galactose, and maltose. These sugars, compared to glucose, did not increase disaccharidase activity. Fructose appears to be the active principle in the sucrose molecule. These results demonstrate that specific dietary sugars can alter enzyme activity in the small intestine of man in a specific fashion. Sucrose and fructose are able to regulate
sucrase
and maltase activity. Dietary alteration of intestinal enzymes may represent a suitable system for studying the regulation of enzyme activity in man.
...
PMID:Control of jejunal sucrase and maltase activity by dietary sucrose or fructose in man. A model for the study of enzyme regulation in man. 567 20
1. Disaccharidase activities of the small and large intestines of the chick were studied. 2. Homogenates of the small intestine readily hydrolysed maltose, sucrose and palatinose (6-O-alpha-d-glucopyranosyl-d-fructose), hydrolysed
lactose
slowly and did not hydrolyse trehalose and cellobiose. 3. Within the small intestine the disaccharidases were located mainly in the intestinal wall; the activity in the contents accounted for less than 5% of the total activity. 4. The disaccharidases were non-uniformly distributed along the small intestine, the activities being greatest in the middle section. 5. The disaccharidase activities increased with age between 1 and 43 days. 6. Homogenates of the large intestine and contents readily hydrolysed maltose, sucrose, palatinose and
lactose
and hydrolysed cellobiose and trehalose slowly. 7. The large-intestinal disaccharidases were located mainly in the contents. 8. Similar K(m) and pH optimum values were found for the maltase,
sucrase
and palatinase activities of the large and small intestines. 9. The lactase activity of the large intestine was markedly affected by diet and had different K(m) and pH values from the small intestinal lactase. 10. Low activities of intestinal disaccharidase were found in 12-day-old embryos and marked increases in the intestinal disaccharidases of the developing embryo occurred 2-3 days before hatching.
...
PMID:Intestinal disaccharidase activities in the chick. 577 6
The activities of the disaccharidases lactase, maltase, and
sucrase
were determined in upper jejunal biopsies of 65 healthy adult German males. The study was an attempt to demonstrate the gene-dosage effect on lactase activity expected from the presence of a "hypolactasia" (l) and a "lactase-persistence" (L) allele in the German population. In contrast to lactase/
sucrase
ratios,
lactose
/maltose ratios showed a trimodal distribution in proportions of presumed genotypes LL, Ll, and ll compatible with Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. The frequency of homozygotes ll (13.8%) was similar to the average frequency of
lactose
malabsorbers in Germany reported in the literature. The importance of considering the lactase gene-dosage effect in population studies of lactase activity is discussed.
...
PMID:Gene-dosage effect on intestinal lactase activity demonstrated in vivo. 642 39
Unsuspected bacterial contamination of the small intestine was indicated by breath hydrogen testing in nine patients aged 2 to 34 months during physical examinations for chronic diarrhea and abdominal pain. Elevated bacterial counts of questionable significance were found in duodenal aspirates before and after antibiotic treatment. There was no evidence of bile salt deconjugation or structural changes in the small intestine by light or electron microscopy. This may indicate that the site of colonization is distal to the biopsy site. Breath testing indicated
lactose
malabsorption in all patients, and four of five patients tested also malabsorbed sucrose. Duodenal disaccharidase levels in all patients were within the normal ranges, but in eight patients the lactase-
sucrase
ratio was greatly elevated (0.80 +/- 0.36; normal less than 0.45). Dietary restriction alone did not cause complete cessation of symptoms, whereas all patients responded dramatically to oral antibiotic therapy. When patients were well, the lactase-
sucrase
ratio had returned to normal in those tested, and all nine had normal
lactose
and lactulose breath hydrogen tests. Unsuspected bacterial contamination of the small intestine, which is easily detected using the breath hydrogen test, may be more commonly associated with chronic diarrhea in children than has been previously realized. In such cases, therapy should be directed at removing the contamination.
...
PMID:Bacterial contamination of the small intestine as an important cause of chronic diarrhea and abdominal pain: diagnosis by breath hydrogen test. 643 89
Intestinal disaccharide uptake was studied with isolated brush-border membrane vesicles lacking the corresponding hydrolase. Either 15-day-old chick intestine, lacking both trehalase and lactase, or newborn pig intestine, lacking
sucrase
, was used. Both animal species yielded osmotically active vesicles capable of D-glucose/Na+ cotransport with a positive overshoot test. Vesicles from either origin gave quantitatively similar results in regard to both initial uptake rates and relative vesicle volumes. The nontransported analogs D-mannitol and L-glucose were used as diffusion markers. When tested with the appropriate disaccharidase-lacking vesicles,
lactose
, trehalose and sucrose exhibited uptake rates indistinguishable from those of D-mannitol and L-glucose. These uptakes were unaffected by the presence or absence of Na+, phlorizin and Tris. Chromatographic analysis confirmed the lack of hydrolysis of each disaccharide after prolonged incubation. The inescapable conclusion seems to be that intact disaccharides are not transported through the brush-border membrane, their uptake occurring through simple diffusion.
...
PMID:Disaccharide uptake by brush-border membrane vesicles lacking the corresponding hydrolases. 643 45
The pathogenesis of diarrhea caused by rotavirus infection was studied in miniature swine piglets. The animals were inoculated orally with 2 X 10(7) plaque-forming units of porcine rotavirus (OSU strain). During the height of diarrhea, intestinal function was investigated by in vivo perfusion of a 30-cm segment of proximal jejunum and a 30-cm segment of distal ileum. Absorption of Na+ and water decreased and 3-O-methylglucose transport was markedly reduced, P less than 0.01 compared to control animals. Mucosal lactase and
sucrase
levels were depressed in both the jejunum and ileum, P less than 0.001. Na+,K+-ATPase activity was significantly depressed only in the ileum, P less than 0.001. These changes were associated with a marked reduction in villous height, suggesting that the diarrhea could be an osmotic diarrhea due to nutrient (carbohydrate) malabsorption. Fresh stool samples were obtained and analyzed immediately for NA+,K+, osmolarity, glucose, and
lactose
; the osmotic gap was also determined. Stool osmolarity continually increased from 248 +/- 20 mosm/liter prior to inoculation to 348 +/- 20 mosm/liter at 75 +/- 1 hr postinoculation (P less than 0.005); the majority of the fecal osmotic gap could be accounted for by the amount of
lactose
present in the stools. Stool sodium increased from 34 +/- 6 mM prior to inoculation to a maximum of 65 +/- 4 mM at 53 +/- 1 hr postinoculation, P less than 0.001. There was no significant change in potassium concentration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of rotavirus-induced diarrhea. Preliminary studies in miniature swine piglet. 648 82
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