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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)
Castanospermine is an indolizidine alkaloid that is found in the seeds of the Australian tree Castanospermum australe. These seeds have been reported to be toxic to animals and to cause severe gastrointestinal upset. In order to determine whether castanospermine is responsible for this toxicity, the alkaloid was injected into young mice or rats, and its effects on various intestinal disaccharidases were determined. Another indolizidine alkaloid, the
alpha-mannosidase
inhibitor swainsonine, was also tested to compare its effects to those of castanospermine. Castanospermine strongly and rapidly inhibited the activity of the disaccharidases,
sucrase
, maltase, and trehalase, with
sucrase
being the most sensitive to inhibition. The loss of activity of these enzymes, especially
sucrase
, in injected animals appeared to be due to a direct inhibition of enzyme activity, rather than to a change in the structure of the glycan chains of the enzyme, since only minor alterations in carbohydrates were observed. On the other hand, swainsonine, when injected into animals, also profoundly decreased the activity of the
sucrase
, but this alkaloid had no direct effect on
sucrase
activity although it did markedly alter the carbohydrate nature of this glycoprotein. This change in oligosaccharide structure may affect protein conformation, stability, or targeting, any or all of which may in turn affect activity. In in vitro studies with the purified enzyme, castanospermine was found to be a competitive inhibitor of intestinal sucrase, but it was a noncompetitive inhibitor of intestinal maltase. A number of other glucosidase inhibitors that inhibit
sucrase
activity in vitro are also described.
...
PMID:The effects of castanospermine and swainsonine on the activity and synthesis of intestinal sucrase. 848 56
Mannose-receptor-mediated clearance of circulating glycoproteins was studied in Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua). Distribution studies with radioiodinated and fluorescently labelled ligands showed that cod liver lysosomal alpha-mannosidase and yeast
invertase
were rapidly eliminated from blood via a mannose specific pathway in liver parenchymal cells and endocardial endothelial cells of atrium and ventricle. Asialo-orosomucoid, a galactose-terminated glycoprotein, was cleared by liver only. In vitro studies were performed with primary cultures of atrial-endocardial endothelial cells (AEC), incubated at 12 degrees C in a serum free medium. Cod AEC endocytosed mannose-terminated glycoproteins (125I-
alpha-mannosidase
, 125I-
invertase
, 125I-mannan, 125I-ovalbumin and unlabelled lysosomal alpha-mannosidase), whereas 125I-asialo-orosomucoid was not recognised. Uptake of radiolabelled mannose-terminated ligands was inhibited 80-100% in the presence of excess amounts of mannan,
invertase
, D-mannose, L-fucose or EGTA. Our results suggest that the cod endocardial endothelial cells express a specific Ca(2+)-dependent mannose receptor, analogous to the mannose receptor on mammalian macrophages and liver sinusoidal endothelial cells.
...
PMID:Mannose-receptor-mediated clearance of lysosomal alpha-mannosidase in scavenger endothelium of cod endocardium. 1142 31
Larval and adult Psacothea hilaris feed on mulberry wood and leaves, respectively. High levels of endogenous activity against the major dietary carbohydrates, cellulose, hemicellulose, starch and soluble sugars were secreted in the gut of larvae and adults. Activity against pectin was also high and multiple polygalacturonase (EC 3.2.1.15) components were secreted in the gut of larvae. One glycanase component, beta-EG1, which was primarily an endo-beta-1,4-glucanase (EC 3.2.1.4) and another, beta-EG2, which was mostly an endo-beta-1,4-xylanase (EC 3.2.1.8), were also secreted, while at least four additional components hydrolysed laminarin, lichenin and crystalline cellulose. The beta-glycosidase component beta-GD1 was associated with most of the beta-mannosidase (EC 3.2.1.25) and beta-xylosidase (EC 3.2.1.37) activity secreted in the gut of larvae, while another, beta-GD2, was a beta-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.21), the activity of which was directed against cellobiose and other beta-linked disaccharides, and a beta-fucosidase (EC 3.2.1.38). A beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23), which did not hydrolyse lactose, was also secreted, as were distinct beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.52), trehalase (EC 3.2.1.28), alpha-L-arabinosidase (EC 3.2.1.55), alpha-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.22) and a minimum of four alpha-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.20) components, one of which was also likely to be associated with a peak of
alpha-mannosidase
(EC 3.2.1.24) activity. The alpha-glucosidase components varied in their specificity for alpha-linked disaccharides, but none was active against sucrose, which was hydrolysed by a
beta-fructofuranosidase
(
EC 3.2.1.26
) component. Overall average levels of activity in larvae were twice those of adults, but the secretion of individual carbohydrases in both was not regulated in response to the relative abundance of particular carbohydrate components in their respective diets.
...
PMID:Diet and carbohydrate digestion in the yellow-spotted longicorn beetle Psacothea hilaris. 1277 Apr 76
We designed and synthesized polyhydroxylated pyrrolidines 1-12 from L-tyrosine, L-phenylalanine, and D-tyrosine through iodine-mediated intramolecular cyclization followed by Woodward-Prevost reaction. The synthetic polyhydroxylated pyrrolidines were identified with structure-based inhibitory activity and selective inhibitory activity against alpha-rhamnosidase. (2S,3S,4R)-deacetyl anisomycin 7 was the best inhibitor among the 12 polyhydroxylated pyrrolidines because it possesses the same stereoconfiguration at C1, C2, C3 as alpha-L-rhamnopyranoside. An investigation into the nature of the inhibition showed that the synthetic pyrrolidines are competitive inhibitors. They also did not have remarkable inhibitory activity against seven glycosidases (alpha-glucosidase,
alpha-mannosidase
, alpha-amylase, beta-glucosidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-amylase, and
invertase
).
...
PMID:Alpha-rhamnosidase inhibitory activities of polyhydroxylated pyrrolidine. 1603 52
The hydrolase content of vacuoles isolated from protoplasts of suspension-cultured tobacco cells, of tulip petals, and of pineapple leaves, and the sedimentation behavior of tobacco tonoplasts were studied. Three precautions were found to be important for the analysis of vacuolar hydrolases and of the tonoplast. (a) Purification of protoplasts in a Ficoll gradient was necessary to remove cell debris which contained contaminating hydrolases adsorbed from the fungal cell-wall-degrading enzyme preparation. (b) Hydrolase activities in the homogenates of the intact cells or the tissue used and of the purified protoplasts had to be compared to verify the absence of contaminating hydrolases in the protoplast preparation. (c) Vacuoles obtained from the protoplasts by an osmotic shock had to be purified from the lysate in a Ficoll gradient. Since the density of the central vacuole approximates that of the protoplasts, about a 10% contamination of the vacuolar preparation by surviving protoplasts could not be eliminated and had to be taken into account when the distribution of enzymes and of radioactivity was calculated.THE INTRACELLULAR ACTIVITIES OF THE FOLLOWING ACID HYDROLASES WERE PRIMARILY LOCALIZED IN THE VACUOLE OF TOBACCO CELLS:
alpha-mannosidase
, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase,
beta-fructosidase
, nuclease, phosphatase, phosphodiesterase. A similar composition of acid hydrolases was found in vacuoles obtained from protoplasts of tulip petals. Proteinase, a hydrolase with low activity in tobacco cells and tulip petals and therefore difficult to localize unequivocally, was found to be vacuolar in pineapple leaves, a tissue containing high levels of this enzyme. Our data support the hypothesis that the central vacuole of higher plant cells has an enzyme composition analogous to that of the animal lysosome.None of the vacuolar enzymes investigated was found to be bound to the tonoplast. When vacuoles were isolated from cells labeled with radioactive choline, the vacuolar membrane was found to contain radioactivity. On sucrose gradients, the label incorporated into tonoplasts banded around a density of 1.10 grams per cubic centimeter (24% sucrose, w/w).
...
PMID:Hydrolytic enzymes in the central vacuole of plant cells. 1666 Aug 69
When 36-hour-old dark grown radish seedlings are transferred to far-red light, there is a decrease in cytoplasmic
beta-fructosidase
(betaF) and an increase in cell wall betaF compared to the dark controls. Cytoplasmic and cell wall-bound
beta-fructosidase
are both glycoproteins and exhibit high antigenic similarities, but differ according to charge heterogeneity and carbohydrate microheterogeneity. Growth of radish seedlings in the presence of tunicamycin results in a partial inhibition of betaF glycosylation but nonglycosylated betaF still accumulates in the cell wall under far-red light. Thus, glycosylation is not necessary for intracellular transport, for correct targetting, or for wall association of an active betaF. The nonglycosylated cytoplasmic and cell wall betaF forms have the same relative molecular mass but glycosylated forms have different oligosaccharide side-chains, with respect to size and susceptibility to
alpha-mannosidase
and endoglycosidase D digestion. The oligosaccharides of both forms are partly removed by endoglycosidase H when betaF is denatured. Isoelectric focusing analysis of betaF shows that the cell wall-associated isozymes are more basic than the cytoplasmic isozymes, and that the charge heterogeneity also exists within a single plant. A time course of changes in betaF zymograms shows a far red light stimulation of the appearance of the basic forms of the enzyme. However, the more basic cell wall specific betaF forms are not present when N-glycosylation is prevented with tunicamycin. These results indicate that cytoplasmic and cell wall betaF probably have common precursor polypeptides and basic cell wall forms arise via processing events which are tunicamycin sensitive.
...
PMID:Cell Wall and Cytoplasmic Isozymes of Radish beta-Fructosidase Have Different N-Linked Oligosaccharides. 1666 97
Antibodies were raised against carrot (Daucus carota) cell wall
beta-fructosidase
that was either in a native configuration (this serum is called anti-betaF(1)) or chemically deglycosylated (anti-betaF(2)). The two antisera had completely different specificities when tested by immunoblotting. The anti-betaF(1) serum reacted with
beta-fructosidase
and many other carrot cell wall proteins as well as with many proteins in extracts of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) cotyledons and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) seeds. It did not react with chemically deglycosylated
beta-fructosidase
. The anti-betaF(1) serum also reacted with the bean vacuolar protein, phytohemagglutinin, but not with deglycosylated phytohemagglutinin. The anti-betaF(2) serum reacted with both normal and deglycosylated
beta-fructosidase
but not with other proteins. These results indicate that the betaF(2) antibodies recognize the
beta-fructosidase
polypeptide, while the betaF(1) antibodies recognize glycan sidechains common to many glycoproteins. We used immunoadsorption on glycoprotein-Sepharose columns and hapten inhibition of immunoblot reactions to characterize the nature of the antigenic site. Antibody binding activity was found to be associated with Man(3)(Xyl)(GIcNAc)(2)Fuc, Man(3)(Xyl)(GIcNAc)(2), and Man(Xyl) (GIcNAc)(2) glycans, but not with Man(3)(GIcNAc)(2). Treatment of phytohemagglutinin, a glycoprotein with a Man(3)(Xyl)(GIcNAc)(2)Fuc glycan, with Charonia lampas beta-xylosidase (after treatment with jack-bean
alpha-mannosidase
) greatly diminished the binding between the antibodies and phytohemagglutinin. We conclude, therefore, that the antibodies bind primarily to the xylosebeta, 1--> 2mannose structure commonly found in the complex glycans of plant glycoproteins.
...
PMID:Characterization of a xylose-specific antiserum that reacts with the complex asparagine-linked glycans of extracellular and vacuolar glycoproteins. 1666 70
The sand fly Phlebotomus papatasi Scopoli, 1786, the vector of Leishmania major Yakimoff et Schokhor, 1914, is found in desert areas where sugars are scarce but also in habitats that abound in sugar sources. The sand flies require sugar meals from plant sources for their energy requirements and to hydrolyze these complex sugars, they need a repertoire of glycosidases. We presumed that there are differences in the levels of glycosidase activities in flies from such habitats and also assumed that they may be instrumental in modulating the flies' susceptibility to L. major infections. Phlebotomus papatasi originating from diverse ecological habitats ranging from an oasis to desert sites were colonized. They were analyzed for weight changes and glycosidase activities before and after feeding on 1M sucrose solution. Oasis flies were smaller than desert flies but took larger sugar meals. Homogenates of these flies hydrolyzed 16 synthetic and 2 natural glycoside substrates to varying degrees. The arid-region flies tended to produce more glycosidase activity than those originating in sugar-rich environments, especially
sucrase
, alpha- and beta-glucosidase, aalpha-fucosidase,
alpha-mannosidase
, and alpha- and beta-N-acetylgalactosaminidase. However, chitinolytic enzyme activities and particularly the beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase activity of oasis flies were higher than other flies tested. In comparing the desert flies, there were also significant differences in glycolytic enzyme activities between the spring-line (flowering season) of flies and the autumn-line (end of dry season) flies. A range of saccharide inhibitors was tested to demonstrate the specificity of the enzymes.
...
PMID:Glycolytic and chitinolytic activities of Phlebotomus papatasi (Diptera: Psychodidae) from diverse ecological habitats. 1830 72
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