Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Six litters of newborn crossbred piglets were utilized to examine 1) the effects of substituting 20% of the protein of an all-milk protein liquid diet with a soy protein isolate (milk-soy diet) on small intestinal variables and 2) the effects of supplementing this milk-soy diet with 25 g of either putrescine or ethylamine per kilogram diet on small intestinal variables. Small intestinal xylose absorption tended to increase from wk 1 to wk 2 of age in pigs fed the milk, putrescine and ethylamine diets, but not in pigs fed the milk, putrescine and ethylamine diets, but not in pigs fed the unsupplemented milk-soy diet. Crypt depth in pigs fed the milk-soy diet tended to be less (9.4%; P greater than .10) than the crypt depth in pigs fed the other diets, but mitotic index was not different (P greater than .10) among diets. Mucosal protein, DNA and RNA concentrations and mucosal brush border sucrase and cytosolic dipeptidase activities tended to be least in pigs fed the putrescine and ethylamine diets. Concentration of mucosal putrescine was greatest (P less than .002) in the distal regions of the small intestine of pigs fed putrescine. Mucosal ornithine decarboxylase activity was inhibited by putrescine (P less than .02), but it was not affected by the soybean protein isolate used in this study. Supplementing soy protein isolate diets with amines may enhance intestinal absorption and enterocyte proliferation.
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PMID:Effects of dietary amines on small intestinal variables in neonatal pigs fed soy protein isolate. 169 Jan 99

Mucosal disaccharidases and ornithine decarboxylase activities were measured in malnourished, preweaning (19 days), post weaning (24 days) and young adult (37 days) rats. Malnutrition resulted in decreased body weight, intestinal weight, DNA and protein content. Mucosal Prot/DNA ratios were elevated in the ileal segments of the 24 and 37 day rats. Preweaned malnourished rats had significantly enhanced lactase specific activity in both jejunal and ileal segments. Adult malnourished rats showed enhanced jejunal lactase and sucrase activities which were not accompanied by elevated ornithine decarboxylase values. Mucosal sucrase and ornithine decarboxylase specific activities were significantly elevated in the ileal segment of the 24 and 37 day old malnourished rats. Studies of adult rats showed that these increased specific activities were located in the mature enterocytes at the villus tip, and persisted during a 24 h diurnal cycle. DFMO administration for 4 days completely inhibited mucosal ornithine decarboxylase and abolished the rise of ileal sucrase activity. We concluded that the intestinal response to reduced food intake is age related and differs in the jejunum and ileum: ornithine decarboxylase and polyamines are involved in ileal adaptation to malnutrition in postweaned and adult rats.
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PMID:Adaptive response of ileal mucosa to malnutrition in the rat: role of polyamines. 192 51

The human colon carcinoma cell line CaCo-2, grown in vitro under standard culture conditions and in the absence of differentiation inducers, spontaneously exhibits structural and functional characteristics of mature small bowel enterocytes. Differentiation is complete at late confluency. High activities of ornithine decarboxylase and diamine oxidase are present in enterocytes. Although these enzymes are involved in polyamine metabolism and therefore in cell replication, their function in small bowel epithelium remains to be defined. In this study ornithine decarboxylase and diamine oxidase activities were assessed in CaCo-2 cells at different stages of proliferation and differentiation. Diamine oxidase was also assayed in spent culture media to assess its spontaneous release by CaCo-2 cells. The trigger effect of medium replacement on ornithine decarboxylase activity was also investigated. Cell growth and cell cycle kinetics were determined by hemocytometric cell count and [3H]thymidine labeling index. Sucrase activity was assayed to evaluate brush-border functional maturation. Elevated ornithine decarboxylase activity was recorded during the replication phase (highest value 0.3 +/- 0.02 U/mg) characterized by high thymidine labeling index (43%), and was greatly enhanced by medium replacement (2.1 +/- 0.3 U/mg). Diamine oxidase activity was low in both cells and medium during the active phase of cell growth, and during the differentiation period it progressively increased (highest value 499 +/- 78 U/mg) along with sucrase activity. The high diamine oxidase activity recorded in the medium (highest value 1292 +/- 310 U/ml) and the evidence of diamine oxidase secretion through the basolateral membrane of the cells cultured on porous filters support the hypothesis of an extracellular role of intestinal diamine oxidase. The CaCo-2 cell line, which shows several analogies with small bowel enterocytes, can be proposed as an interesting in vitro model for studying many aspects of cell replication and differentiation depending on polyamine metabolism.
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PMID:Ornithine decarboxylase and diamine oxidase in human colon carcinoma cell line CaCo-2 in culture. 250

Oral feeding of DL-difluoromethyl ornithine (DFMO) (2% in water ad libitum) for 14 days has no detectable effect on the small intestine of adult rats. Similar feeding of DFMO to weanling rat pups caused diarrhea in three to four days accompanied by a decrease in food consumption and body weight compared to age-matched controls. Significant decreases in small intestinal mucosal weight, total protein, DNA, enterokinase, leucine amino peptidase, sucrase, and maltase contents were observed in the DFMO-treated group four days after treatment. Extending the treatment to seven days led to a more severe reduction in these parameters. Villous atrophy of the mucosa was demonstrable by light microscopy and morphometric measurements. The mucosa of the DFMO-treated rat pups showed a reduction in total thickness and villous height but no change in crypt depth. A significant reduction in villus-crypt ratio was also seen. Changes in small intestinal mucosal parameters were not due to a decrease in food intake since pair-fed, age-matched rat pups showed no biochemical changes compared to control pups. DFMO-treated weanling rats showed less than 5% of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity when compared to age-matched control animals. The effects observed on the small intestinal mucosa are presumably due to inhibition of ornithine decarboxylase activities by DFMO which prevents the proliferation, regeneration, and maturation of epithelial cells. The relative insensitivity of the adult rat small intestine to DFMO treatment suggests a lesser dependence of its intestinal mucosa to ODC activities.
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PMID:Effect of difluoromethyl ornithine (DFMO) on small intestine of adult and weanling rats. 311 4

To evaluate the roles of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) and polyamines in the regulation of epithelial repair, rabbit mid-small intestine after transient ischaemic villus injury in the presence and absence of DL-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO), an irreversible inhibitor of ODC was studied. Rabbits received 2% (w/v) DFMO in drinking water for two days before undergoing a sham laparotomy, or a 90 minute mesenteric vascular occlusion of 20 cm of mid-intestine. DFMO fed and control rabbits were studied four, 24, 72, or 120 hours after this ischaemic intestinal injury. In controls, ischaemic injury caused shortened villi at four hours (p less than 0.01), diminished mucosal sucrase and alkaline phosphatase activities at 24 hours (p less than 0.05), but raised ODC (p less than 0.001) and thymidine kinase (p less than 0.01) activities at four hours with recovery by 72 hours. DFMO treatment significantly reduced ODC activity at all stages of the experiment and significantly inhibited the rise in activity observed after injury (p less than 0.01). Mucosal concentrations of the polyamines, spermidine and spermine, were similar in the sham operated groups; four hours and 24 hours after ischaemia, they increased in the DFMO animals (p less than 0.01) but fell (p less than 0.05) in those that did not receive DFMO. After ischaemic injury, DFMO treatment inhibited ODC but failed to influence recovery of villus structure or enzyme activities in the small intestine. We conclude that ODC and the polyamines, spermidine and spermine, are not key regulators of small intestinal repair after transient ischaemia.
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PMID:Failure of ornithine decarboxylase inhibition to alter small intestinal epithelial repair after transient segmental ischaemia. 313 52

In adult sparse-fur mutant mice, ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) activity represents only 14% of the normal values. We studied the development of this activity from birth to adult period and demonstrated that the enzyme deficiency is already fully expressed at birth, in both the liver and the small intestine of mutants. Since OTC catalyzes the conversion of ornithine to citrulline, in the presence of carbamoyl-phosphate, the effect of a disturbed ornithine metabolism on the postnatal development of the small intestine has been evaluated. The normal appearance of sucrase as well as the normal increase of glucoamylase, trehalase, and alkaline phosphatase activities are delayed in sparse-fur mice compared with controls. Moreover, normal adult values are never attained. In contrast, the normal decline of lactase activity is impaired while leucylnaphthylamidase activity is unaffected. Cell proliferation, as evaluated by [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA and mitotic index, is less active during the 3rd wk of life in mutants. These phenomena are closely associated with a transient weak arginase and ornithine decarboxylase activity in the small intestine. Since arginase catalyzes the conversion of arginine to orthithine, thus ensuring the availability of this substrate for ornithine decarboxylase activity, these results indicate a disturbance of polyamine metabolism in mutant enterocytes with a consequent delay in postnatal differentiation and proliferation. Sparse-fur mutant mouse may therefore represent a useful animal model for evaluating the role of ornithine metabolism in the maturation process of the small intestine.
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PMID:Postnatal maturation of enterocytes in sparse-fur mutant mice. 395 97

We have followed the time-course of the morphological and functional recovery of intestinal mucosa after 90 min of mesenteric vascular occlusion. At the end of the ischemic period the villi were smashed, but crypts were preserved. Microvillous hydrolase activities showed a dramatic drop when compared with sham-operated controls. Reperfusion was followed by an immediate upsurge of ornithine decarboxylase activity and a significant (p < 0.01) enhancement of putrescine and N1-acetyl-spermidine concentrations, while spermidine and spermine concentrations in mucosal cells decreased. This indicated that, both, de novo synthesis and degradation rates of the polyamines were increased. Treatment with alpha-difluoromethyl-ornithine, a selective inactivator of ornithine decarboxylase prevented the accumulation of active enzyme, but did not prevent morphological healing. It delayed however the recovery of sucrase and aminopeptidase-specific activities. Our results suggest that in addition to de novo synthesis, other sources of polyamines are mobilized to an extent that growth at a normal rate is supported. This indicates that the presence of active ornithine decarboxylase enzyme is not a prerequisite for the restitution of intestinal integrity after ischemia. We suggest that in a situation of inadequate polyamine supply the restoration of vital processes (mucosal regeneration) has priority over the restoration of specific functions.
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PMID:Polyamines and the recovery of intestinal morphology and function after ischemic damage in rats. 817 30

The factors regulating the developmental changes in intestinal morphology and enzyme activity during the postnatal period are incompletely understood. Increased ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) and polyamine levels occur in association with increased mucosal growth seen just prior to weaning. The present work examines the effects of the polyamine spermidine, administered exogenously during early postnatal development in the rat, on structural and functional differentiation of the intestine. Young rats were fed 6 mumol of spermidine for either 1 day (P1) or 3 days (P3) prior to sacrifice on postnatal day 10. Control littermates were sacrificed at day 10 (C10) or at day 49 (C49) (postweanling [adult] reference). A loss of most of the well-developed characteristic endosomal complex and supranuclear giant lysosome was observed in the absorptive cells of the ileum and proximal colon in the spermidine-treated groups and was accompanied by a decline in N-acetyl-glucosaminidase activity to adult levels. A precocious appearance of sucrase and NaK ATPase activities was observed in the P1 group and these activities attained adult levels in the P3 group. This premature appearance of sucrase and NaK ATPase activities was associated with a decline in lactase levels. The exogenous administration of spermidine also elicited an increase in mucosal ODC activity.
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PMID:Effect of exogenously administered polyamine on the structural maturation and enzyme ontogeny of the postnatal rat intestine. 839 Mar 4

The polyamine dependence of enterocyte growth and differentiation was studied in the human intestinal cell line CaCo-2 using a specific inhibitor of the key enzyme ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), difluoromethylornithine (DFMO). ODC was highest during the initial phase of rapid growth and was inhibited in a dose dependent fashion by DFMO at 0.06-2 mM. At low levels DFMO only delayed cell replication without affecting final cell count whereas at concentrations of 0.125 mM and above the final cell number was diminished by at least 53% compared to controls. In contrast, DFMO even at 0.03 mM reduced sucrase activity to 44% of controls when added at day 2 but was ineffective when supplemented at day 7 of culture or later. The inhibitor also diminished the number and length of microvilli in a dose dependent fashion, although this effect required higher DFMO levels than the reduction of sucrase activity. The DFMO mediated suppression of cell replication, enzymatic and morphologic differentiation was reversible in the presence of the ODC product putrescine. Putrescine alone did not affect any of the above parameters. In conclusion, the present data suggest that ODC and polyamines are involved both in enterocyte growth and differentiation.
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PMID:Polyamine deficiency impairs proliferation and differentiation of cultured enterocytes (CaCo-2). 846 53

To evaluate the role of dietary polyamines in maturation of the rat small intestine, spermine was given orally twice daily to suckling pups from day 10 to day 14 postpartum at different doses: 0, 0.2, 0.5, 1, 2.5, and 5 mumol/dose. Compared to saline treated controls, spermine (5 mumol) produced significant increases in mucosal mass parameters (+12 to +57%, P < 0.05), induced prematurely an adult pattern of microvillous enzymes, and enhanced, respectively, by 19- and 3.5-fold (P < 0.01 vs controls) the concentration of the secretory component of p-immunoglobulins in villous and crypt cells. The response of microvillous enzymes (lactase, sucrase, maltase, and aminopeptidase) to spermine was dose-dependent and -specific since oral administration of arginine (5 mumol) or ornithine (5 mumol) was without effect. Intestinal changes were found to be significant (P < 0.05) for doses of spermine exceeding 1 mumol/day, which is in the range of the amount of polyamines provided by solid pellets at weaning (0.4 mumol/g). However, intestinal changes were undetectable at the physiological amounts of polyamines consumed by pups from rat milk during the suckling period (less than 0.3 mumol/day). Consistent with a direct effect of spermine on the intestinal cell, the cytosolic activity of ornithine decarboxylase was depressed by 27-fold (P < 0.005 vs controls) in the jejunum, while inhibition of ornithine decarboxylase by alpha-difluoromethylornithine did markedly decrease but did not suppress the cell response to spermine. Alternately, plasma corticosteronemia, which was virtually absent by day 14 in controls, ranged between 1.4 and 4.6 micrograms/dl in 60% (N = 9) of the spermine-treated rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Maturation of villus and crypt cell functions in rat small intestine. Role of dietary polyamines. 850 5


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