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)

During the third week of postnatal life, dramatic ontogenic changes occur in the morphology and enzymology of the small intestine of the infant rat, enabling the animal to make the transition from milk to solid food. To investigate the roles of T4 and GH in regulation of these changes, infant rats were hypophysectomized on day 6 of life by the transauricular technique. Hypophysectomy resulted in diminution of somatic and intestinal growth as well as abnormal maturation of the disaccharidases lactase, sucrase, and maltase when measured on day 25. Administration of either T4 or GH to hypophysectomized animals resulted in moderately increased intestinal growth, while complete restoration of small intestinal growth resulted from administration of the combination of both hormones. Although T4, GH, or the combination of hormones reduced lactase activities, T4 alone produced normal maturation of sucrase and maltase. Neither hypophysectomy nor hormone replacement affected aminooligopeptidase. The molecular structure of lactase, analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, was not altered to a major degree in hypophysectomized animals or animals that received hormone replacement, but minor alterations were evident in sucrase structure in hypophysectomy. These studies indicate that 1) T4 and GH actively participate in postnatal regulation of small intestinal ontogeny; 2) thyroid hormones act directly on developing intestinal tissues to independently produce the normal maturation of the disaccharidases by mechanisms that are not likely to involve alterations in processing of the enzyme-protein; and 3) maturation of aminooligopeptidase is not regulated by pituitary hormones, in distinct contrast to the disaccharidases.
Endocrinology 1991 Sep
PMID:Pituitary regulation of postnatal small intestinal ontogeny in the rat: differential regulation of digestive hydrolase maturation by thyroxine and growth hormone. 187 80

The disaccharidase activities of the mucous membrane of the small intestine were determined in formerly hypotrophic children who showing a dystrophy with a morphological normal mucosa (n = 36), patients with a flat mucosa caused by enteral protein intolerances of different genesis (n = 27), patients with a morphologically and functionally normal mucosa (n = 51). In about half of the former small-for-date children were shown activities lower than the simple standard deviation of the normal value, for lactase n = 17, for sucrase n = 14, for maltase n = 12. Some children showed pathologically reduced activities even below the double standard deviation for the normal value: lactase n = 8, sucrase n = 5, maltase n = 3.
Kinderarztl Prax 1991 Sep
PMID:[Comparative studies of the activity of disaccharidases in the mucosa of the small intestines in dystrophic, formerly hypotrophic-born young children and of patients with flat mucosa of various etiology]. 194 85

Candida stellatoidea is classically distinguished from C. albicans by the ability of the latter species to assimilate sucrose. We show here that sucrose-positive revertants of C. stellatoidea type II are readily isolated and that C. stellatoidea type II strains probably resulted from a mutation in the sucrase gene of C. albicans. The revertants were not laboratory contaminants, as determined by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis and retention of an auxotrophic marker. The reversion of three tested strains was accompanied by 16 to 110-fold increases in expression of a sucrase/alpha-glucosidase but not an invertase, with a Km for sucrose of about 1 mM. The enzyme activity was assayable in intact cells. The drastically increased expression of such an enzyme would allow extracellular sucrose hydrolysis and assimilation of the monosaccharide products.
Infect Immun 1990 Sep
PMID:Evidence that Candida stellatoidea type II is a mutant of Candida albicans that does not express sucrose-inhibitable alpha-glucosidase. 197 85

Lactase, maltase, sucrase, and alkaline phosphatase activities were determined in the intestinal mucosa from 3 locations in the small intestine and 4 locations in the large intestine 1 year after extensive large-colon resection (group 1; n = 5) and 1 year after sham operation (group 2; n = 3) in horses. Lactase, maltase, and sucrase activities were similar (P greater than 0.05) between group-1 and group-2 horses in all locations measured in the intestinal tract. Alkaline phosphatase activity in the remaining large colon of group-1 horses was significantly (P less than 0.05) greater than the activity in the large colon of group-2 horses. Decreased apparent digestion of phosphorus and a negative phosphorus balance are persistent features of large-colon resection in horses. Increases in alkaline phosphatase activity in the remaining colon of horses with extensive large-colon resection may be a specific functional adaptive mechanism that attempts to counteract the derangements in phosphorus metabolism.
Am J Vet Res 1990 Sep
PMID:Alteration of intestinal enzyme activities associated with extensive large-colon resection in horses. 211 42

The effect of supplementation of the diet with galactose on the age-related decline of intestinal lactase activity was investigated in 108 growing rats. Starting from 14 days of age, the rats were divided into two groups and fed with chow, and with fluid either as tap water or 5% galactose solution. At 14 days the specific lactase activity was 112.8 +/- 3.2 mumol min-1 (g protein)-1, which decreased to less than 10% of this value at maturity. Galactose supplementation did not prevent the decline. The increase of maltase, sucrase and trehalase was also unaffected. The result suggests that galactose plays no significant role in the regulation of disaccharidase activities in the rat.
Exp Physiol 1990 Sep
PMID:The effect on intestinal disaccharidase activity of feeding galactose to growing rats. 224 21

Aspergillus nidulans produces an extracellular invertase when incubated in the presence of sucrose and about half of the activity produced was found to be associated with the mycelium. Sixty percent of this mycelial invertase could be solubilised by simple mechanical disruption. Among the agents tested for solubilisation of invertase, proteinase K and dithiothreitol were the most effective.
FEMS Microbiol Lett 1990 Sep 15
PMID:Solubilisation of a cell wall bound invertase in Aspergillus nidulans. 227 93

The effects of various types of dietary fat on brush border membrane-bound enzymes in rat intestinal mucosa were examined. Four groups of five rats were pair-fed defined diets for 10 d. The control group was fed a diet containing 57% sucrose and 2% corn oil as a fixed carbohydrate reference; the three experimental groups received diets containing 57% sucrose and 2% corn oil plus 13% fat in the form of medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) or long-chain triglycerides (LCT) (either lard as a highly saturated fat or corn oil as a highly unsaturated fat). Feeding LCT compared to the control diet, decreased sucrase activity in mucosal brush borders of the duodenum and jejunum. In these segments of MCT-fed rats, sucrase activity was similar to that in the control animals. In another experiment, measuring immunoreactive sucrase-isomaltase in jejunal brush border membranes revealed that feeding a high corn oil diet, but not a high MCT diet, led to a reduction in the sucrase catalytic activity per unit weight of enzyme protein, suggesting that the degradation status of sucrase-isomaltase might be altered by the different types of dietary fats. With MCT feeding, jejunal alkaline phosphatase activity was enhanced to a large extent compared to the activity in other groups. Feeding MCT, compared to lard or corn oil, also increased microvillus phospholipids of the jejunal mucosa. These results suggest that MCT, unlike LCT, do not suppress the activity of mucosal microvillus membrane enzymes in rat small intestine.
J Nutr 1990 Sep
PMID:Effects of medium-chain triglycerides on brush border membrane-bound enzyme activity in rat small intestine. 239 18

To investigate the regulation of expression of intestinal sucrase-isomaltase (SI) complex in response to sucrose feeding, we isolated a cDNA (RPSI1) encoding partially the pro-SI of rat intestinal mucosa. The clone consists of 1929 mRNA-derived nucleotides, which covered the region including the C-terminal part of the isomaltase and the N-terminal part of the sucrase in the final SI complex. Nucleotide and amino-acid sequences of RPSI1 were compared with their corresponding regions in rabbit pro-SI. A greater similarity was found in sucrase parts than in isomaltase parts of the two species. Northern blot analysis revealed that the mRNA levels of SI increased rapidly after sucrose force feeding, while those of rats fed a carbohydrate-free diet did not. These changes in mRNA levels correlated with the corresponding enzyme activities. The results demonstrate that the induction of SI activities is directly associated with an increase in SI mRNA levels. Our results also suggest that circadian modulation of SI transcription may occur in basic SI gene expression.
Biochim Biophys Acta 1990 Sep 10
PMID:Molecular cloning and characterization of a rat intestinal sucrase-isomaltase cDNA. Regulation of sucrase-isomaltase gene expression by sucrose feeding. 240 Jul 88

To determine whether serum and mucosal DAO activity reflects quantitative changes in the small bowel mucosal mass, we have chosen an experimental model of mucosal hyperplasia which is known to occur in the rat after enterectomy. A 50% proximal enterectomy or a single transection was performed in 20 growing rats weighing 145-160 g. Ten days following surgery, we determined mucosal mass parameters (weight, protein, and DNA content), sucrase activity, and DAO activity in the duodenum (segment A), proximal ileum (segment B), and distal ileum (segment C) of the remaining small intestine. Mucosal hyperplasia was demonstrated by the finding that in each segment, mucosal weight, protein, and DNA content per centimeter of gut length were significantly (P less than 0.01) higher (+38 to + 78%) in the resected group than in transected controls. In segments B and C of resected rats, the changes in DAO activity expressed per gram of mucosa paralleled the changes in mucosal mass, the activity being increased by +69% and +49% (P less than 0.05) compared to the values recorded in transected controls. Expressed per centimeter of gut length, total DAO activity was also enhanced by +141% in segment B (P less than 0.05 vs controls) and by +87% in segment C (P less than 0.01 vs controls) of resected rats. In the duodenum, the changes in DAO activity were small (+36%) and not significant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Dig Dis Sci 1989 Sep
PMID:Changes in serum and intestinal diamine oxidase (DAO) activity after proximal enterectomy in rats. Correlation of DAO activity with mucosal mass parameters. 250 67

The treatment of lactating mothers with 50 micrograms/100 g b.w. thyroxine s.c. daily from the 1st to 21st day of lactation resulted in earlier induction of alpha-glucosidases (pancreatic alpha-amylase, intestinal saccharase) and in earlier repression of beta-galactosidases (intestinal lactase). In contrast, the sucklings fed by thyroidectomized mothers showed a delayed induction of pancreatic alpha-amylolytic activity and intestinal saccharase, but ameliorated the repression of lactase. The treatment of another group of thyroidectomized mothers with 5 micrograms/100 g b.w. thyroxine prevented such effects mothers of thyroidectomy in sucklings.
Endocrinol Exp 1989 Sep
PMID:Postnatal development of pancreatic alpha-amylase and intestinal saccharase and lactase in rat sucklings as related to thyroid function of mothers. 250 96


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