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)

Alterations in transport function have been described 6 weeks after surgical resection of 50% of the distal small intestine. Previous studies demonstrated a modest increase in the jejunal uptake of medium chain length fatty acids following resection, while the uptake of many other lipids (cholesterol, bile acids, fatty alcohols, short and long chain length fatty acids) appears to be unaffected. Marked changes in the kinetic constants for the carrier-mediated uptake of four sugars and leucine were observed following resection, but the changes in transport were not associated with changes in the mucosal surface area. This study was undertaken to examine the possible adaptive mechanisms that occur with ileal resection in the rabbit. A 29% increase in the wet weight of jejunal mucosal scrapings and a 53% increase in jejunal brush border membrane (BBM) protein was observed following resection. The jejunal BBM sucrase (S) was unchanged following ileal resection, but alkaline phosphatase (AP) total activities were increased in the resected rabbits. This resulted in a 45% increase in the ratio of AP/S with resection. The lipid composition (total free fatty acids, total bile acids, total cholesterol, total phospholipids, individual phospholipids, and the ratio of total phospholipids/total cholesterol) of BBM was similar in control and resected rabbits. This suggests that quantitative rather than qualitative changes in the membrane composition may be responsible for the transport changes observed in resected animals.
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PMID:Resection of rabbit ileum: effect on brush border membrane enzyme markers and lipids. 383 Mar 51

We have examined the nature of the decline of lactase (EC 3.2.1.23) activity in the maturing rat intestine. It was established in an initial study that the activity decline reflected a proportional reduction in the concentration of the enzyme protein. Accumulation patterns of label into lactase, total intestinal proteins and sucrase (EC 3.2.1.48)-isomaltase (EC 3.2.1.10) were compared, 4 h following administration of a tracer dose of [3H]leucine to weanling rats exhibiting a wide range of lactase decline. Accumulation of increasing amounts of label in total intestinal proteins and sucrase-isomaltase pools was found to accompany the lactase decline, in contrast to accumulation of a constant amount of label in the declining lactase pools. The pattern of increased label accumulation in total intestinal proteins was shown in a corollary study to reflect a corresponding acceleration of total protein synthesis. On this basis, the finding of a constant amount of label in the declining lactase pools suggested a constant synthesis of lactase. We proposed earlier that associated reductions in enterocyte life-span (leading to correspondingly less lactase accumulation) rather than suppressed synthesis may provide the primary causal basis of lactase decline in the postweaned mammal.
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PMID:The nature of maturational decline of intestinal lactase activity. 392 28

The influence of dietary fatty acid composition on intestinal active and passive transport function, brush border membrane composition, and morphology was examined in rats. Animals fed a semisynthetic diet high in saturated fatty acids demonstrated enhanced in vitro jejunal uptake of decanoic, dodecanoic, palmitic, stearic, and linoleic acid, as well as cholesterol and chenodeoxycholic and taurochenodeoxycholic acid, as compared with uptake in animals fed a semisynthetic diet high in polyunsaturated fatty acids but equivalent in total content of fat and other nutrients, or as compared with Purina chow. Feeding the saturated fatty acid diet was also associated with reduced jejunal uptake of a range of concentrations of glucose, enhanced ileal uptake of leucine, unchanged uptake of galactose, and lower uptake of decanol. The semisynthetic diets did not alter brush border membrane protein, sucrase or alkaline phosphatase activities, cholesterol, or total phospholipids, although the percentage of jejunal amine phospholipids was higher than in rats fed chow. The morphologic differences between the jejunum and ileum were abolished in animals fed the high polyunsaturated fatty acid diet; in rats fed the high saturated fatty acid diet, there was reduced mean ileal villus height, width, thickness, surface area, cell size, and villus density, as well as reduced mucosal surface area. The changes in jejunal transport were not correlated with the alterations in morphology, unstirred layer resistance, food intake, or body weight gain. It is proposed that small changes in the percentage of total dietary lipids composed of essential and nonessential fatty acids (without concurrent alterations in dietary total fat, carbohydrate, or protein) influence active and passive intestinal transport processes in the rat.
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PMID:Dietary fat selectively alters transport properties of rat jejunum. 394 55

Cationic, lipid-soluble organic compounds may interfere with cation-mediated membrane transport processes. Thus, small intestinal absorption may be influenced by lipophilic organic cations. Therefore a series of arylalkylamines was studied in the concentration range from 0.5 to 20 mmol/l for their effect on the transport of various monosaccharides and leucine in the rat small intestine in vitro by means of the tissue accumulation technique. Whereas the monophenyl substituted monoamines (e.g. benzylamine, 2-phenylethylamine, 3-phenylpropylamine) did not show a significant effect on the active transport, the corresponding omega,omega-diphenyl derivatives exhibited a strong inhibition of the active transport of the sugars and the amino acid. These monoamines and drugs of similar structure (e.g. benzoctamine, diphenydramine) exhibited a mixed or non-competitive type of inhibition which correlated quite well with their octanol-water partition coefficients. In contrast, di- or triamines (e.g. harmaline, imipramine, pyrilamine) revealed a rather pure competitive type of inhibition. These findings tentatively suggest a different mode of action on the active transport by lipid-soluble organic amines according to the molecular charge distribution. In addition, membrane vesicles were used to examine the effect of the different amines on the sucrase activity. Regarding the cation-dependent hydrolysis of sucrose, however, no distinct pattern developed.
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PMID:In vitro inhibition of rat small intestinal absorption by lipophilic organic cations. 397 Sep 18

In Neurospora, invertase is predominately an extracellular enzyme, and acid phosphatase is partially external in location. Both extracellular invertase and acid phosphatase were rapidly and quantitatively inactivated by acid treatment (pH 1.3). When such acid-treated cells were incubated with a suitable carbon source, a substantial regeneration of invertase activity occurred, but no restoration of acid phosphatase could be detected. The regeneration of invertase does not occur by renaturation of the inactivated enzyme, nor by secretion of a preexisting intracellular pool of invertase, but instead requires de novo enzyme synthesis. Invertase synthesis was partially repressed by glucose and mannose and was completely inhibited by 2-deoxyglucose. Acetate was found to inhibit invertase regeneration and the transport and incorporation of uracil and leucine. Several potential inhibitors of transcription, including alpha-amanitin, 5-fluorouracil, actinomycin D, and three derivatives of rifamycin, were ineffective in preventing invertase regeneration and in inhibiting the synthesis of ribonucleic acid. Conidia appeared to be very poorly permeable to these compounds.
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PMID:Regeneration of invertase in Neurospora crassa. 426 89

Saccharomyces cerevisiae NCYC 366 is susceptible to cold osmotic shock. Exponentially growing cells from batch cultures grown in defined medium at 30 C, after being suspended in 0.8 m mannitol containing 10 mm ethylenedia-minetetraacetic acid and then resuspended in ice-cold 0.5 mm MgCl(2), accumulated the nonmetabolizable solutes d-glucosamine-hydrochloride and 2-aminoisobutyrate at slower rates than unshocked cells; shocked cells retained their viability. Storage of unshocked batch-grown cells in buffer at 10 C led to an increase in ability to accumulate glucosamine, and further experiments were confined to cells grown in a chemostat under conditions of glucose limitation, thereby obviating the need for storing cells before use. A study was made of the effect of the different stages in the cold osmotic shock procedure, including the osmotic stress, the chelating agent, and the cold Mg(2+)-containing diluent, on viability and solute-accumulating ability. Growth of shocked cells in defined medium resembled that of unshocked cells; however, in malt extract-yeast extract-glucose-peptone medium, the shocked cells had a longer lag phase of growth and initially grew at a slower rate. Cold osmotic shock caused the release of low-molecular-weight compounds and about 6 to 8% of the cell protein. Neither the cell envelope enzymes, invertase, acid phosphatase and l-leucine-beta-naphthylamidase, nor the cytoplasmic enzyme, alkaline phosphatase, were released when yeast cells were subjected to cold osmotic shock.
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PMID:Cold osmotic shock in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 500 Dec 1

The digestive (hydrolytic enzymes) and absorptive (sugar and amino acid transport) functions of dog small intestine have been evaluated in different segments and analysed in relation to morphometric and biochemical parameters. The dog small intestine is a cylinder of decreasing diameter in which the underlying mucosa thins down from duodenum to ileum, though maintaining its cellular homogeneity as revealed by measuring the mucosal weight, the total DNA and protein content and the protein content of the brush border membrane. Sucrase, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, leucylnaphthylamidase and alkaline phosphatase specific activities, measured both in homogenates of the mucosa and purified brush border membrane fractions, were found distributed along proximo-distal gradients of activity. However, different patterns were obtained which are specific for the enzyme considered. Kinetic parameters, Vmax and Km, were estimated for sucrase and alkaline phosphatase in purified brush border membrane fractions. It appeared that Vmax correlated well with the observed distribution of catalytic sites along the small intestine. Sugar (glucose) and amino acid (alanine and leucine) transport capacities were also distributed according to specific proximo-distal gradients but passive and facilitated diffusions were not affected. Only the active, Na+ -dependent component of transport was sensitive to position along the small intestine and we postulated that this adaptation should involve variations in carrier densities. It is therefore concluded that absorbo-digestive functions are intrinsic characteristics of the brush border membrane which are regulated according to the position along the small intestine.
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PMID:Digestive and absorptive functions along dog small intestine: comparative distributions in relation to biochemical and morphological parameters. 614 47

The effect of a single oral dose of endosulfan (5 mg/kg body weight) on the uptake of certain nutrients and brush-border enzymes has been studied in rat intestine. The uptake of glucose and alanine was elevated but that of leucine was decreased in endosulfan-fed rats. There was no change in the uptake of phenylalanine and lysine in insecticide-fed rats. The activities of brush-border sucrase and alkaline phosphatase were considerably increased while the activity of Na+ K+ ATPase was reduced in endosulfan-exposed animals. The leucine aminopeptidase activity was unaffected in pesticide-treated rats. There was a significant decrease in cellular LDH and GOT activities with no change in GPT activity. Neither was there a considerable increase in the cellular glucose-6-phosphatase activity (P less than 0.01) in the pesticide-fed rats. These results suggest that endosulfan toxicity induces certain functional changes in the intestine.
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PMID:Effect of a single oral dose of endosulfan on intestinal uptake of nutrients and on brush-border enzymes in rats. 618 May 24

The effect of a single oral dose of pp'DDT (100 mg/kg body wt.) has been studied on the intestinal uptake of certain nutrients and on brush border enzymes in rats. Intestinal uptake of leucine, and phenylalanine was considerably increased but there was no change in the absorption of glucose and alanine in DDT fed rats, compared to controls. The activities of brush border sucrase, alkaline phosphatase and Na+, K+-ATPase were significantly depressed in pesticide treated animals, but leucine aminopeptidase levels remained unaffected under these conditions. Analysis of the chemical composition of the microvillus membranes revealed a considerable enhancement in total lipids, phospholipids and triglyceride contents of the membranes in DDT exposed rats, but membrane protein, sialic acid and cholesterol fractions did not record any change. 1-14C-acetate incorporation into various lipid classes was studied to explain the observed increase in membrane lipids in DDT exposed animals.
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PMID:Effect of a single oral dose of pp'DDT on the absorption of nutrients in vitro and on brush border enzymes in rat intestine. 627 79

Brush-border-membrane vesicles isolated from hamster ileum were incubated with either papain or Pronase P and subsequently centrifuged to obtain soluble (supernatant) and insoluble (pellet) fractions. Papain (4 units/ml) solubilized 95--100% of the sucrase and leucine naphthylamide-hydrolysing activities but only 30% of the alkaline phosphatase. Digestion with papain also resulted in the solubilization of more than 75% of the ileal receptor for intrinsic factor-vitamin B-12 complex with a corresponding decrease in receptor activity in the pellet. Essentially 100% of the receptor activity was recovered. In contrast, digestion with Pronase P resulted in a decrease in total receptor activity. Papain-solubilized receptor was not sedimented by centrifugation at 105 000 g for 90 min and was eluted in the included volume of Sepharose 6B. Like the binding to more intact preparations, binding of intrinsic factor-vitamin B-12 complex to papain-solubilized receptor was rapid, reaching 50% of maximum in 8 min, and required Ca2+. Although Mg2+ could not completely substitute for Ca2+, Mg2+ did stimulate Ca2+-dependent binding at low Ca2+ concentrations. These results demonstrate that the ileal receptor for intrinsic factor-vitamin B-12 complex can be solubilized with papain, and suggest that papain solubilization may be a useful first step in the isolation and purification of this receptor.
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PMID:Solubilization of the ileal receptor for intrinsic factor--vitamin B-12 complex by digestion with papain. 628 Jun 80


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