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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)
Same circadian difference in the specific activities of
sucrase
and maltase was observed in the purified brush border fraction as in the crude homogenate of the mucosa of rat small intestine, suggesting that the disaccharidase rhythm is not due to the mitosis rhythm of epithelial cells.
...
PMID:Disaccharidase rhythm in rat small intestine; no relationship with mitosis rhythm. 35 Jun 5
Developmental changes in sucaras-isomaltase complex formation were investigated in intestinal mucosal homogenates and brush border membranes of 15-day-old, 18-day-old and adult rats using Sephadex G-200 column chromatography and polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis. Disaccharidases were solubilized by papain treatment. The molecular weight of the complex did not change during development, however, the activity ratio of
sucrase
to isomaltase increased during development. Furthermore, a significant amount of free isomaltase, which was probably not to be derived from intestinal brush border membrane, was detected before the weanling.
...
PMID:Developmental changes in the sucrase-isomaltase complex in rat intestinal mucosa. 35 31
The activity of the membrane-bound enzymes of the microvillous zone of the entreocytes (maltase,
sucrase
, trehalase, lactase, cellobiase, alkaline phosphatase and leucylaminopeptidase) was studied in mucosal smears from the proximal jejunum, ileum, caecum and sigmoid flexure in a group of control (C) (8) and germ-free (GF) (7) rabbits. The trypsin and chymotrypsin activity of the contents of the ileum, caecum and sigmoid flexure was studied in 6 C, 5 GF and 5 monocontaminated (MC) rabbits. In summing up it can be stated that the individual membrane-bound enzymes have a different gradient in the various intestinal segments of C and GF rabbits and that they differ reciprocally in character. The maximum statistically significant differences between GF and C rabbits were found in the ileum; in the jejunum they were somewhat smaller and in the caecum smaller still (in this localization the difference was C versus GF). Striking differences in the proportion of the individual disaccharidases were found inthe jejunum and ileum of C rabbits compared with GF rabbits, in which, in both these segments of small intestine the relationship maltase greater than
sucrase
greater than trehalase greater than lactase was preserved. The proteolytic activity of the intestinal contents likewise had a different gradient character in C, MC and GF rabbits. The maximum activities (especially trypsin) were found in MC animals. The microbial flora is one of the factors regulating the enzymatic activities of the microvillous zone of the enterocytes and it also significantly influences the proteolytic activity of the intestinal contents. This influence is particularly marked in the distal part of the alimentary tube.
...
PMID:Digestive enzymes of the mucosa of the small intestine and trypsin and chymotrypsin proteolytic activity of the intestinal contents of germ-free, monocontaminated and conventional rabbits. 35 55
Maltase and
sucrase
activities were measured in the intestine of broilers inoculated with sporulated coccidial oocysts. Infection with Eimeria acervulina, E. maxima, E. necatrix, and E. brunetti decreased disaccharidase activity in the intestinal region in which maximum infection was found compared with the activity in uninoculated controls. The maximum reduction occurred on the first or second day of patency followed by a rapid recovery in activity. Disaccharidase activity was inversely proportional to the inoculum dose.
...
PMID:Disaccharidase activity in the intestinal tissue of broilers infected with coccidia. 35 14
Bacterial extracts were prepared from cultures originating in chronic self-filling intestinal blind loops in rats. Their ability to remove active maltase molecules from isolated brush border membranes was studied in vitro. Twelve strains in 51 tested, belonging to one of three species, Bacteroides fragilis, Clostridium perfringens, and Streptococcus fecalis, possessed maltase-releasing activity. The ability to remove maltase correlated well with the ability to hydrolyze p-nitrophenyl-tert-butyloxycarbonyl-l-alaninate (NBA), an ester substrate rapidly hydrolyzed by elastase, but not with substrated favored by tryhsin and chymotrypsin. Maltase-releasing activity from C. perfringens was strongly inhibited by soybean trypsin inhibitor and to a lesser extent by lima bean trypsin inhibitor. Of four chloromethylketone active-site directed inhibitors tested with specificities for elastase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin, inhibition was maximal with elastase-specific inhibitors. In two species, activity was shown to be heat sensitive, and to be inhibited by concentration of the extract. In one species maltase-releasing activity was shown to be due to an enzyme of molecular weight at least 66,000 with the capacity to remove lactase,
sucrase
, and alkaline phosphatase, as well as maltase. The results indicate that anaerobic or facultatively anaerobic species, previously identified with the pathology of of the blind loop syndrome, contain proteases which are capable of removing components of the intestinal surface membrane. These proteases appear to have elastase-like substrate specificity and may be involved in the etiology of disaccharidase deficiency in bacterial overgrowth syndromes.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of mucosal injury in the blind loop syndrome. 35
Studies were made on the effects of intraluminal factors on the circadian rhythm and the adaptive change to diet of maltase and
sucrase
activities in rat small intestine. Rats given carbohydrate-free diet for 1 week showed lower specific activities of these enzymes than rats on the latter diet. Segments of jejunum, isolated as blind sacs with normal blood and nerve supplies, showed the same circadian rhythm as unligatured jejunum, but their enzyme activities were not increased by administration of carbohydrate-rich diet for 1 week. Thus it was concluded that the adaptive changes of disaccharidase activities caused by change in diet depend primarily on the presence of carbohydrate in the intestinal lumen, whereas the circadian rhythmic changes do not.
...
PMID:Circadian rhythm and dietary response of disaccharidase activities in isolated rat jejunum. 35 2
The activities of ornithine aminotransferase,
sucrase
and acid and alkaline phosphatases have been studied throughout sporulation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The same enzymes were monitored during synchronous vegetative growth. Each of these enzymes has been demonstrated to increase in a 'step' manner during both growth and sporulation. Alkaline phosphatase increased in a two-step manner whereas the others increased in a single step. The times of increase of these enzymes formed a similar sequence during both sporulation and growth. It has been proposed that these enzymes are under a common mechanism of control during growth and sporulation and that the sequence of enzyme appearance may be used as markers of the sporulation process.
...
PMID:The use of step enzymes as markers during meiosis and ascospore formation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 37 Mar 42
To determine whether oxytetracycline hydrochloride and the sodium salt of ampicillin have any adverse effects on the rat intestine, enteric enzyme levels and glucose transport rates were measured in vitro in rats. The intestinal transport of glucose did not differ significantly between control animals and those pretreated with ampicillin. For animals pretreated with oxytetracycline, the transport rates were significantly lower than those for the control group. The difference between the ampicillin and oxytetracycline groups, however, was not statistically significant. No significant differences in enteric levels of
sucrase
and maltase activity were found between any of the groups. The possibility that some antimicrobial agents may interfere with the absorption of nutrients suggested the need for caution in using these drugs in experimental animals.
...
PMID:The effects of selected antimicrobials on glucose transport in the rat intestine. 37 63
The in-vivo effects of sodium deoxycholate (DOC) at low concentrations on the release of protein and some brush border hydrolases,
sucrase
(SA), maltase (MA), leucine aminopeptidase (LA), alkaline phosphatase (AP), have been investigated in the rat by a jejunal perfusion technique. During perfusion with DOC (0.125 or 0.25 mmol/l), enzyme release was not enhanced. After removal of DOC from the perfusion solution with 0.125 mmol/l DOC, there was a steady release of SA, MA and AP although enzyme release was increased linearly in the control and the 0.25 mmol/l DOC groups. The results also confirm the deep localization of AP within the membrane.
...
PMID:Do low doses of deoxycholate modify the release of rat jejunal brush border hydrolases? 37 3
1. Jejunal biopsy specimens from three children with congenital
sucrase-isomaltase
deficiency were assayed for disaccharidase activity and were subjected to analytical subcellular fractionation with enzymic microanalysis. 2. By use of the highly sensitive fluorigenic modification of the disaccharidase assay, brush-border
sucrase
and isomaltase activities were depressed but nevertheless detectable in each child. 3. Apart from the expected decrease in brush-border alpha-glucosidase activity, the other enterocyte marker-enzyme activities were normal. 4. There were no abnormalities in the enterocytes of any child on analytical subcellular fractionation or on electron microsocopy.
...
PMID:Subcellular fractionation studies of the intestinal mucosa in congenital sucrase--isomaltase deficiency. 38 73
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