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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)
Synthetic membranes containing 10% acrylamide units were subjected to activation with formaldehyde at pH 7.5 and 45 degrees C. Trypsin,
invertase
, and urease were bound to this activated membrane and the kinetic properties of immobilized enzymes were studied. The permeability of the membrane for distilled
water
manifests certain differences depending on the enzyme bound. The membranes with immobilized enzymes stored at 4 degrees C in a moist state showed no change in their activity for 6 months. The membrane with immobilized
invertase
has preserved its activity even after 20 operations with 2% sucrose solution at 25 degrees C. The proposed method of binding enzymes to synthetic membranes containing acrylamide groups, through the introduction of N-hydroxymethyl groups, possesses several advantages with respect to the activation of the membrane in a one-step reaction with cheap and accessible reagent, high operative stability of the immobilized enzymes, no danger of bacterial rotting, and long shelf life of the membrane.
...
PMID:Covalent binding of enzymes to synthetic membranes containing acrylamide units, using formaldehyde. 205
The effect of ingested epidermal growth factor (EGF) on the small intestinal mucosa of conventionally weaned pigs was determined. At 21 days of age, 39 pigs were randomly distributed into suckling and weaned treatment groups that were administered 124 micrograms of EGF, 372 micrograms of EGF, or the dosing compound daily. Fecal
water
content was determined daily. On postweaning days 0, 3, 6, and 9, representative pigs from each group were euthanatized, and jejunal mucosa samples were collected for determination of villus-to-crypt ratio, total protein content, disaccharidase activities, and microbiological populations. At postweaning day 3, the 372-micrograms dose of EGF significantly (P less than or equal to 0.05) increased jejunal lactase and
sucrase
activities in the weaned pigs. Increased lactase activity was not greater than that of the suckling pig controls, whereas
sucrase
activity was significantly (P less than or equal to 0.05) higher than that of the suckling pig controls. Significant changes were not observed in villus-to-crypt ratio, mucosal protein content, or disaccharidase activities on other collection days.
...
PMID:Effect of orally administered epidermal growth factor on the jejunal mucosa of weaned pigs. 210 78
The role of colonizing bacteria in the small bowel in causing diarrhea remains unclear. We examined whether colonizing, nontoxigenic Escherichia coli could alter small bowel function by determining net
water
and electrolyte fluxes and
sucrase
activity in colonized and noncolonized ileal segments by using the reversible-ileal-tie adult rabbit model. Colonization of the ileum with nontoxigenic E. coli for greater than or equal to 72 h at greater than or equal to 10(4)/cm2 was associated with significant functional derangements, as follows: (i) overt liquid diarrhea in 50% of animals colonized at greater than 10(4)/cm2; (ii) reversal of normal net ileal absorption to net secretion of
water
, sodium, and chloride; and (iii) significant decrease in mucosal
sucrase
activity. We conclude that small bowel colonization by colonizing, nontoxigenic E. coli impairs
water
and electrolyte absorption and
sucrase
activity in the absence of recognized enterotoxin, cytotoxin, invasion, or effacement traits.
...
PMID:Net fluid secretion and impaired villous function induced by colonization of the small intestine by nontoxigenic colonizing Escherichia coli. 218 43
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.
...
PMID:The effect on intestinal disaccharidase activity of feeding galactose to growing rats. 224 21
To determine whether zinc has a specific role on weight gain and intestinal disaccharidase activity, 42 male Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned to one of seven groups (n = 6 each). These were a baseline control group (0) that was killed to analyze initial intestinal disaccharidase (
sucrase
and maltase) activity, a second group (A) fed a zinc-deficient diet for 1 week, a third group (B) pair-fed control for A, a fourth group (C) fed a zinc-deficient diet for 2 weeks, a fifth group (D) pair-fed control for C, a sixth group (E) fed a zinc-deficient diet for 3 weeks, and a seventh group (F) pair-fed control for E. All experimental groups received distilled deionized drinking
water
, whereas control groups received zinc-enriched (25 micrograms of zinc/ml) distilled deionized
water
.
Water
was given ad libitum. After killing, the mucosa of the proximal half of the small intestine was analyzed for protein and disaccharidase activity, and liver, kidney, and heart were analyzed for zinc concentration. Protein content and disaccharidase activity of the jejunal mucosa in the experiment and control groups did not differ significantly. However, animals on the zinc-deficient diet demonstrated mildly depressed growth rates that were proportional to the duration of the experiment, and significantly lower zinc concentration in the kidney in the experimental groups. The data indicate that administration of a zinc-deficient diet for up to 3 weeks did not result in significant changes in intestinal mucosa protein content or in disaccharidase activity.
...
PMID:Effect of zinc-deficient diet of varying duration on intestinal disaccharidase activity in the rat. 232 70
Physicians studied 16 moderately to severely malnourished infants 6 months old who had severe diarrhea for 2 weeks and did not gain weight. After admitting the infants, they administered total parenteral nutrition (TPN) to the infants through a central vein. As the infants began receiving TPN, they were randomly assigned to receive either banked human milk or sterile
water
by continuous nasogastric feeding for 2 weeks. In addition, before beginning nasogastric feedings and at the conclusion of the study, a physician performed a peroral biopsy of the small intestine. Small intestine perfusion studies were also done in the beginning and at the end of the 2 week period. More infants in the human milk group than in the sterile
water
group had 25% decrease in
sucrase
activity (p.02). Researchers noted that the villus/crypt ratio was similar in both groups at the beginning of the study and improved only in the sterile
water
group (p.002), but this was not a function of treatment. Additionally, more infants in the human milk group had an increase in the intraepithelial lymphocyte count than those in the sterile
water
group (milk, 5/7;
water
, 1/8; p.03). On the other hand, the data demonstrate that no differences existed in glucose and
water
absorption or in lactase and maltase activities as a function of the milk versus
water
treatment. Therefore, the results of this study suggest that human milk does not benefit small intestine mucosa recovery. Research to determine the effect of predigested formulas or specific factors in fresh human milk on the rate of mucosal recovery is needed.
...
PMID:Human milk and the rate of small intestinal mucosal recovery in protracted diarrhea. 249 97
The effect of chronic intragastric infusion of hypertonic mannitol on small intestinal mucosal structure and function was studied in adult rats. Animals were gavage-fed 20% mannitol (1300 mosm) at a dose of 5 ml/100 g body weight daily for seven days. Control animals were gavage-fed tap
water
on the same schedule. On day 8, the animals were anesthetized, the duodenum cannulated, and a test sugar (glucose, glucose polymer, lactose, sucrose, or maltose) was infused at a dose of 0.5 g/kg body weight in 2.5 ml distilled
water
over less than 1 min. Portal vein glucose was measured at 30-min intervals from 0 to 120 min. Mannitol treatment resulted in histologic and biochemical alterations (reduced lactase,
sucrase
, maltase) limited to the proximal small intestine compared to the control group. The absorption of glucose and glucose polymers was similar in mannitol-treated and control animals. In contrast, digestion and absorption of lactose, sucrose, and maltose was significantly diminished in mannitol-treated animals when compared to controls. No changes in permeability to polyethylene glycol 4000 or Na+-coupled glucose transport were observed in mannitol-treated animals compared to controls. These data suggest that when the intestinal mucosa is exposed to hyperosmolar loads that the digestive capacity for disaccharides is suppressed more than its glucose absorptive capacities. Furthermore, glucose oligomers may be more readily digested and absorbed than disaccharides, in this setting, due, in part, to the proximal injury and less pronounced proximal-distal gradient for glucoamylase than other brush-border carbohydrases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Proximal small intestinal mucosal injury. Maintenance of glucose and glucose polymer absorption, attenuation of disaccharide absorption. 249 65
The inactivation of external yeast
invertase
by irradiation in dilute aqueous solution has been investigated. The contributions of the individual radical species from
water
radiolysis to inactivation and amino acid degradation were estimated from the results of experiments in which solutions were saturated with nitrogen, nitrous oxide or oxygen, and on addition of hydroxyl radical scavengers. Under conditions where inactivation by hydroxyl radicals predominates, the rate of inactivation increased with increasing dose, indicating that in the initial stages of the radiolysis the mannose-rich oligosaccharide chains of the glycoprotein protect the polypeptide chain from radical attack. Amino acid analysis of the irradiated external
invertase
showed that there was significant destruction of tyrosine, phenylalanine, methionine and histidine residues. Destruction of methionine and histidine residues may be responsible for the free radical-induced inactivation of this enzyme.
...
PMID:The radiation-induced inactivation of external yeast invertase in dilute aqueous solution. 256 93
A genetic library consisting of over 5000 clones with an average insert size of 6.9 kilobasepairs (kbp) of Streptococcus mutans GS-5 has been constructed in a bivalent plasmid vector pMK3, which is capable of replicating in Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis. The recombinant plasmid pSUCRI, containing a 6.0 kbp fragment of S. mutans GS-5 DNA, was the focus of this study. Using Southern hybridization, in vitro and in vivo gene expression techniques, and biochemical analysis, this clone was shown to encode the 55 kiloDalton (kDal) GS-5 gtfA gene product, as well as a 38 and a 66 kDal polypeptide. In addition to the gtfA gene, pSUCRI encodes a dextranase activity with specificity for alpha(1----6)-linked glucans, and with no detectable activity on mutan. The dextranase enzyme had an apparent molecular weight of 66 kDal as demonstrated by SDS-PAGE analysis of the proteins produced by a dextranase-negative deletion derivative. The pH optimum of the enzyme was approximately 6.0, and there was no detectable activity below pH 5.0. By subcloning various combinations of DNA fragments from pSUCRI, it was demonstrated that the dextranase gene (designated dexB) can be separated from the gtfA gene and still be efficiently expressed in both E. coli and B. subtilis. The dexB gene contained its own promoter and ribosome-binding site. The genetic linkage of the gtfA and dexB genes in the S. mutans GS-5 chromosome was confirmed by Southern hybridization and by the independent isolation of four distinct clones containing the gtfA gene and common flanking sequences. In addition to a glucosyltransferase and dextranase, an
invertase
-like activity is also encoded on pSUCRI, indicating that there is a cluster of genes on the S. mutans GS-5 chromosome which is devoted to the dissimilation of sucrose and concomitant synthesis or modification of glucans into a
water
-insoluble form, perhaps constituting an operon for glucan modification which can be coordinately regulated in response to environmental alterations.
...
PMID:Tight genetic linkage of a glucosyltransferase and dextranase of Streptococcus mutans GS-5. 294 34
A model of nonischemic hypoxia of the jejunum was designed in dogs, by shunting of blood from the inferior vena cava directly into the regional mesenteric arterial supply, thereby lowering the PaO2 of the blood that reached the jejunal wall from 98.6 +/- 3 to 62 +/- 5 mm Hg. Absorption rates of sodium, glucose, fructose, glycine, and the dibasic aminoacid lysine were studied by in situ luminal perfusion of a 30-cm proximal jejunal segment with a bicarbonate buffer solution containing phenol red as a nonabsorbable marker for determination of
water
fluxes. During periods of control, hypoxia, and after discontinuation of the venoarterial admixture (recovery), effluent perfusate was collected and mucosal biopsies were obtained for assay of lactase, maltase and
sucrase
activity, mucosal ATPase activity and ATP content, and for light- and electron microscopic examination. Mesenteric supply with hypoxic blood was associated with a significant inhibition of Na+,K+-ATPase activity (p less than 0.001) and a rise in mucosal ATP content (p less than 0.05). There was a significant reduction in the absorption rates of sodium (p less than 0.001), glucose, and glycine (p less than 0.01), but no change in the transport of fructose and of lysine. Brush border enzymes were unaltered. The histological appearance of the mucosa remained normal throughout the experiment, but on electron microscopy a distinct swelling of the enterocyte mitochondria was noted during the hypoxia period.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of nonischemic hypoxia on jejunal mucosal structure and function: study of an experimental model in dogs. 294 46
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