Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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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)
The effects of
Gossypol
acetic acid (10 mg/kg b. wt. daily for 15 days), an experimental male antifertility agent and its subsequent withdrawal for another 15 days, on the structure and functions of the rat small intestinal tract have been investigated.
Gossypol
feeding causes a reduction in body weight and intestinal weight, length, protein, and nucleic acid contents. A 27%-50% reduction in the uptake of glucose, alanine, leucine, and calcium is observed after
Gossypol
feeding which is found to be reversible after 15 days of withdrawal of the drug.
Gossypol
also causes a significant reduction in the activities of
sucrase
, lactase, maltase and alkaline phosphatase in the intestinal homogenates as well as in the purified brush border membrane of the microvillus. A decrease in the maximum of apparent enzyme velocity and no change in the substrate affinity constant in these digestive hydrolases are observed on
Gossypol
treatment. It also causes a shift in the transition temperature in these enzymes and predictably changes the energy of activation both below and above the temperature of transition, although the Arrhenius expression of the temperature dependence still shows proximity, non-linearity, and is parallel to the control group. These changes are reversed on withdrawal of the drug and during the subsequent recovery period. Recovery experiments also show near identical values in kinetic parameters (Kt and Jmax) of 14C-glucose uptake in jejunal segments both in the presence and absence of Na+ ions. Also, no difference is observed between the control and recovery groups with respect to body and intestinal weight, intestinal length, and DNA, RNA, protein, lactate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase values in the intestinal homogenates. Phospholipid, cholesterol and sialic acid levels in both the groups also show nearly identical values. Molecular mechanism of the effects of
Gossypol
on brush border membrane-bound enzyme/carrier molecules operation is discussed in view of the kinetic and thermodynamic data obtained.
...
PMID:Reversibility of the effects of gossypol acetic acid, an antispermatogenic/antifertility agent on the intestinal structure and functions of male albino rats. 274 9
Oral administration of
Gossypol
acetic acid (10 mg/kg body wt./day, daily for 15 days), an experimental antifertility agent to male rats, caused significant reduction in the uptake of glucose, alanine, leucine and calcium in the small intestinal segments.
Gossypol
also caused significant decrease in the intestinal brush border membrane--associated enzymes,
sucrase
, lactase, maltase and alkaline phosphatase. Kinetic analysis indicated that
Gossypol
decreased the apparent velocity of the disaccharidases while the Km was not altered. It also caused a shift in the transition temperature in these enzymes and predictably changed the energy of activation both below and above the transition temperature, although the Arrhenius expressions of the temperature dependence still showed proximity and were parallel to the control group.
...
PMID:Effects of gossypol acetic acid on the absorptive and digestive functions of rat intestine. 324 43
Gossypol
, a pigment found in cottonseed that has recently been shown to have antifertility properties, inhibited the activity of 3 intestinal brush border enzymes in a concentration-dependent manner. Suspensions of rat intestinal mucosa were incubated with various concentrations of gossypol for 45 minutes and then washed. At a concentration of 6 mg per gm mucosa, gossypol inhibited the activities of alkaline phosphatase, maltase, and
sucrase
by 57, 73, and 77%, respectively.
Gossypol
is a bifunctional agent, capable of cross-linking amino acid side chains, and its action on brush-border enzymes may be due to this mechanism. Recent investigations have demonstrated that rats fed a diet of 10-15 mg of gossypol/day/kg of body weight exhibit reduced fertility. This study suggests that a partial inhibition of brush-border enzymes may occur at doses used to cause infertility. Such a side effect should be considered in studies and treatments utilizing a gossypol diet.
...
PMID:Inactivation of intestinal brush-border enzymes by gossypol. 1228 3