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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)
Activities of maltase,
sucrase
, lactase and acid-beta-galactosidase were studied in jejunum and ileum of term rat fetuses obtained by cesarian section. Female rats were either untreated or injected daily in the last (3rd) week of pregnancy with cortisone acetate (10 or 50 mg/100 g body weight) or L-triiodothyronine (20 or 50 microgram/100 g body weight). Two other control groups were injected with appropriate solvents. Cortisone or T3 treatment to mothers increased
sucrase
and maltase activity in jejunum and ileum of the offspring. Generally, higher doses of hormone were more effective.
Lactase
activity was increased by 25% in the jejunum by the higher dose of cortisone. Both doses of cortisone increased ileal lactase. Jejunal acid-beta-galactosidase activity was decreased in fetuses of T3-treated mothers.
...
PMID:Effect of cortisone or L-triiodothyronine administration to pregnant rats on the activity of fetal intestinal disaccharidases and lysosomal acid beta-galactosidase. 41 95
The changes with age of intestinal mucosa, protein, lactase, maltase and
sucrase
were followed in the piglet between day 105 of gestation and 8 weeks after birth.
Lactase
and maltase activities appeared during fetal life in the whole of the small intestine. Activity of
sucrase
was recorded after the 1st postnatal week.
Lactase
activity was high at birth and reached a maximum at 1 week (X 2.5); maltase activity which was low at birth increased to the 8th week (X 143). Activities of all enzymes were low in the duodenum; lactase was most active in the jejumum. Similar activities of maltase and
sucrase
were found in the two distal parts of the small intestine. Specific activity (related to protein content) of lactase reached a maximum at the end of the 1st week after birth and decreased afterwards. Specific maltase and
sucrase
activities were higher in the 2nd week, decreased between the 2nd and 4th week and increased afterwards (maltase) or decreased to the 6th--8th week (
sucrase
).
...
PMID:Development of digestive enzymes in the piglet from birth to 8 weeks. II. Intestine and intestinal disaccharidases. 41 3
Lactase
and
sucrase
activities were measured in jejunal biopsies from a group of alcoholic and nonalcoholic men of similar nutritional status, consisting of American blacks, and whites of northern European origin. When measured withing 10 days of alcohol withdrawal,
sucrase
activity was decreased by 33% in the alcoholics.
Lactase
activity was less than 1 U per g in 100% of the black and 20% of the white alcholics as compared to 50% of the black and none of the white control subjects.
Lactase
activity was virtually absent in 45% of the black alcoholics. A second jejunal biopsy after an additional 2-week period of alcohol abstinenece exhibited significant secondary increases in the activities of both disaccharidases. Oral administration of lactose (1 g per kg of body weight) resulted in significantly lower blood glucose concentration and higher incidence of adverse effects in alcoholics, mainly among the blacks. Although data from larger populations are needed to confirm our observations, these findings suggest that chronic alcohol ingestion decreases intestinal disaccharidase activities even in the absence of overt malnutrition. The decrease in enzyme activity produced by alcohol is associated with increased morbidity after lactose administration.
...
PMID:Symptomatic intestinal disaccharidase deficiency in alcoholics. 83 22
Twenty-eight Sioux and 29 Saluteaux Indians from a southern and an isolated northern Manitoban community were screened for lactose malabsorption; 55 were also screened for sucrose tolerance. Sixty percent of the subjects were lactose malabsorbers; the incidence increased with age.
Lactase
deficiency appeared, on the average, between 8 and 15 years of age. About 45% of the subjects were lactose intolerant. Malabsorbers who did not regularly drink milk had the highest symptom scores. The northern subjects consumed significantly more lactose and sucrose than the southern subjects. Two Sioux children were sucrose malabsorbers. It was hypothesized that the significantly greater sucrose consumption by the Saulteaux subjects were responsible for their markedly higher blood glucose curve following the sucrose tolerance tests. Dietary sucrose increases jejunal
sucrase
activity and the intestinal transport of glucose and fructose. Three of eight children less than 4 years were lactose malabsorbers; hence, medical personnel treating noninjective diarrhea in Indian children should examine for lactase deficiency. It was recommended that vitamin D fortified milk supplements to Indian school children be continued and that the milk be treated so as to reduce abdominal symptoms in the intolerant individuals.
...
PMID:Disaccharide consumption and malabsorption in Canadian Indians. 85 12
Lactase
deficiency, manifested clinically by lactose malabsorption, is often the only biochemical evidence of a residual disturbance of jejunal mucosal function after Escherichia coli enteropathy in the infant. Villous morphology is usually normal. A sustained depression of the processes of biochemical differentiation of lactase biosynthesis has been postulated to explain similar states of lactase deficiency, but a possible influence of altered epithelial cell turnover on the mucosal lactase levels has not been investigated. In ten infants with a residual lactose malabsorption, after E. coli infection, jejunal cell renewal activity and disaccharidase activities were studied by analysis of the exfoliated cells collected by lumenal perfusion. Significant increases in DNA and protein exfoliation and in the brush border activities of
sucrase
and lactase were observed during recovery from the malabsorptive disturbance. DNA and protein efflux increased almost linearly during a 20-day period.
Lactase
was initially four times more deficient than
sucrase
activity in the exfoliated cells. Both enzyme activities increased at almost identical rates. Therefore, it took longer for lactase activity to return to normal levels. The lactase/
sucrase
ratios approached normal at the end of the 20-day period. The changes in the exfoliating levels of the two enzymes, when analysed in relation to the increases in cell renewal activity, suggested a relationship between
sucrase
and lactase levels and cell age.
...
PMID:Intestinal exfoliated cells in infant diarrhoea: changes in cell renewal and disaccharidase activities. 104 54
Lactase
and cellobiase were detectable in the fetal intestine by the 3rd month of gestation, and although there was little change by the 9th month, maximal levels were reached at birth and steadily declined after 4 months. Conversely maltase,
sucrase
and trehalase were barely discernible in the fetus, maltase being present at low levels at birth, but all increased during the suckling period to attain adult levels by 7 months of age. Alkaline phosphatase activity matured earlier than did disaccharidase activity. Mucosal enzymes other than alkaline phosphatase were virtually absent from meconium and the large intestine. Continued ingestion of lactose could be detrimental in foals suffering from severe diarrhoea.
...
PMID:The development and distribution of mucosal enzymes in the small intestine of the fetus and young foal. 106 Aug 71
The longitudinal distribution of various enzymes along the human small intestine was studied by analysis of biopsies from different parts of the small intestine, obtained from 13 patients during shunt-operation for severe obesity. Alkaline phosphatase and 3 glycolytic enzyme activities studied were rather uniformly distributed along the small intestine. Acid beta-galactosidase and hetero beta-galactosidase activities were highest in the proximal small intestine with a gradual decline throughout the intestine. The activity in the distal ileum was about half of the maximum activity. Maltase, isomaltase,
sucrase
, and trehalase activity had a broad maximum in the proximal and middle small intestine with a rather sharp decrease in the distal ileum.
Lactase
activity had a more pronounced maximum in the middle intestine with a pronounced decrease towards the proximal and distal ends. The disaccharidase activities in surgical biopsies taken 5 cm distal to the ligament of Treitz were about 10% higher than in peroral biopsies taken just at the ligament.
...
PMID:Distribution of disaccharidases, alkaline phosphatase, and some intracellular enzymes along the human small intestine. 117 59
1.
Lactase
,
sucrase
, maltase, trehalase and alkaline phosphatase activities of rat proximal jejunum were measured in 3, 6, 9, 12, 18 and 24-month-old rats fed with diets differing in their fatty acid composition. 2. A drop of 47-53% of the specific enzyme activity was observed with disaccharidases against a decrease of 71% for alkaline phosphatase in the 24-month-old rats compared to the 3-month-old rats. 3. Changes in dietary fatty acid composition, either in the saturated or monounsaturated ratio, or in the polyunsaturated fatty acid composition, did not significantly interfere with this aging effect.
...
PMID:Diet fatty acid composition, age and rat jejunal microvillus enzyme activities. 134 82
Suckling rats were given urogastrone-epidermal growth factor (EGF: 1,000 micrograms/kg body weight) or vehicle by gavage at one of three stages of development: 8 to 10, 11 to 13 or 14 to 16 days of age. Intubation was carried out at 8-hourly intervals over these periods. Fourteen to 16 h after the last intubation the rats were killed; that is, at 11, 14 and 17 days respectively. Samples of proximal and distal small intestine (SI) were taken for enzyme analysis. Five enzymes were assayed;
sucrase
, lactase, gamma-glutamyl transferase, alkaline phosphatase and neutral amino-peptidase, and their activities expressed per g protein. Treatment with EGF had no effect on body weight or on the length of the small intestine at any age. The nature of the effects on enzyme activities depended on the specific enzyme concerned, the site within the small intestine and the timing of the treatment.
Lactase
was increased by EGF at both sites only on day 14, whereas gamma-glutamyl transferase was increased in proximal samples at 11 and 14 days, and in distal samples at 17 days. Nor was the outcome always to increase activity. On day 11 alkaline phosphatase was increased in proximal SI, but decreased in distal SI; and so too was aminopeptidase N decreased in distal SI at 11 days. Sucrase showed no response at all. The pattern is complex. Certainly it does not indicate accelerated functional maturation.
...
PMID:Effects of urogastrone-epidermal growth factor and age at administration on five enzymes in the small intestine of suckling rats. 136 15
Thyroid hormone [triiodothyronine (T3)] has been shown to play a critical role in the growth and maturation of the mammalian small intestine, but its mechanism of action has not been well studied. In the current study, an animal model of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism was used to study the effects of T3 on the small intestine. Adult rats were treated with propylthiouracil for a 6-week period and then given injections of either saline (hypothyroid) or 30 micrograms/100 g body wt of T3 (hyperthyroid). Northern blot analyses showed marked differential regulation of brush border enzyme gene expression.
Lactase
messenger RNA (mRNA) levels decreased approximately 75% along the length of the small intestine, whereas
sucrase
levels were unchanged. The intestinal alkaline phosphatase mRNA species were upregulated by T3, especially the 3-kilobase band, which increased most dramatically in jejunum. Further experiments showed significant levels of both the alpha-1 and beta-1 T3 receptor mRNAs within the small intestinal mucosa. Histological examination showed that T3 treatment causes marked villus hyperplasia throughout the length of the small intestine. These results provide insight into the mechanism by which T3 exerts its influence on the growth and differentiation of the intestinal epithelium.
...
PMID:Thyroid hormone differentially regulates rat intestinal brush border enzyme gene expression. 138 52
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