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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 activities of the digestive enzymes, maltase [EC 3.2.1.20],
sucrase
[
EC 3.2.1.26
], trehalase [EC 3.2.1.28], Leucine aminopeptidase [EC 3.4.11.1], and alkaline phosphatase [EC 3.1.3.1] were measured in various regions of the small intestine of rats. The activities of all these enzymes were much higher in the jejunum than in the ileum, and in the distal regions of the ileum no
sucrase
, trehalase or alkaline phosphatase activity was detected. In the jejunum, the activities of all the enzymes tested exhibited clear circadian variations with the highest activity at 0000-0400 h and the lowest at 1200 h when the rats were fed ad libitum. In the ileum, maltase and
sucrase
also exhibited circadian variations, but the amplitude of the rhythm was smaller than that in the jejenum.
Trehalase
and alkaline phosphatase did not show any circadian variation in the ileum. Leucine aminopeptidase showed a circadian variation in the ileum with the same amplitude as in the jejunum. The phase of the circadian variations shifted about half a day when the rats were fed in the daytime, but the amplitude of the rhythm did not change.
...
PMID:Circadian rhythms in digestive enzymes in the small intestine of rats. I. Patterns of the rhythms in various regions of the small intestine. 122 10
1.
Trehalase
, sucrase-isomaltase and maltase-glucoamylase are three integral glycoproteins of the brush border membranes of the enterocytes. On the basis of a comparative study on alpha-glycosidase activities (
sucrase
, isomaltase, maltase, glucoamylase and trehalase) associated to these glycoproteins during neonatal development, mammals could be basically divided into three groups. 2. In rodents and rabbit alpha-glycosidase activities are low or undetectable during the suckling period and increase to adult levels during the weaning period. In cat, dog and the primates examined, alpha-glycosidase activities are well or fully developed at birth. 3. In ruminants and pinnipedia alpha-glycosidases are low or absent throughout life. 4. During the suckling period of rat, mouse and rabbit, glucocorticoids trigger a premature and dramatic increase of all alpha-glycosidases. 5. On the contrary, alpha-glycosidases development during the weaning period appears to be independent of glucocorticoids. Neither hypophysectomy nor adrenalectomy prevent the development of alpha-glycosidases; only the rate of increase is reduced. 6. Transplantations of intestinal isografts either in adult or suckling animal, have shown that (1) no systemic factor inhibits the expression of alpha-glycosidase, (2) alpha-glycosidases induction is neither triggered by luminal alimentary substances, nor by hormones, (3) alpha-glycosidase development is controlled by an intrinsic ontogenic program. 7. The use of an antiglucocorticoid failed to inhibit the spontaneous development of alpha-glycosidase activities. 8. The increase of maltase and
sucrase
activities triggered by glucocorticoids is associated with an increase of the concentration of two glycoproteins in the microvillous membrane: sucrase-isomaltase and maltase-glucoamylase. 9. After administration of glucocorticoids the increase of maltase,
sucrase
and trehalase is strongly inhibited by actinomycin-D and the increase of
sucrase
activity is associated with a parallel increase of sucrase-isomaltase mRNA. Transcription is most likely the primary site of control of alpha-glycosidase biosynthesis. 10. In the crypt cells, alpha-glycosidases biosynthesis appears to be triggered by a receptor-mediated glucocorticoid interaction. 11. The enterocytes synthesize more alpha-glycosidase molecules as they travel to the tip of the villi. 12. The simultaneous, biosynthesis of sucrase-isomaltase and maltase-glucoamylase triggered by glucocorticoids, as well as their simultaneous normal development suggest that they may be subjected to related control mechanisms. 13. It is suggested that sucrase-isomaltase and maltase-glucoamylase might have arisen by several cycles of partial gene duplication of an ancestor gene coding for a single site maltase-isomaltase; subsequent mutation would have transformed isomaltase into
sucrase
or glucoamylase.
...
PMID:Brush border membrane sucrase-isomaltase, maltase-glucoamylase and trehalase in mammals. Comparative development, effects of glucocorticoids, molecular mechanisms, and phylogenetic implications. 251 62
Small-intestinal disaccharidase activities of eight suckling T. vulpecula, aged from 34 to 150 days, and of two adult animals were investigated. Intestinal maltase, isomaltase and
sucrase
activities increased with age, whereas lactase activities decreased.
Trehalase
activities were relatively high in all animals and showed no obvious age-related changes. Three separate beta-galactosidase activities, one neutral and two acid, acted on lactose. The neutral beta-galactosidase activity appeared to be due to a brush border enzyme similar to that of eutherian mammals, whereas the acid beta-galactosidases were soluble and probably of lysosomal origin. One of these, acid beta-galactosidase-1, had similar properties to the sole intestinal beta-galactosidase of macropodid marsupials, whereas the other, acid beta-galactosidase-2, has not previously been described. Galactosyl oligosaccharides isolated from macropodid milk were readily hydrolysed by both acid beta-galactosidases but not by the neutral beta-galactosidase. The total intestinal lactase activity in animals aged up to 125 days was due mainly to acid beta-galactosidase-1, whereas in older animals it was due mostly to the neutral beta-galactosidase; this suggests that late in lactation the young T. vulpecula change from a macropodid mode of digestion of galactosyl oligosaccharides to a eutherian mechanism for the digestion of lactose. These findings may have implications for the hand-rearing of orphaned T. vulpecula.
...
PMID:Intestinal lactase (beta-galactosidase) and other disaccharidase activities of suckling and adult common brushtail possums, Trichosurus vulpecula (Marsupialia:Phalangeridae). 251 66
An experiment was done to determine maltase,
sucrase
, isomaltase, and trehalase activities in mucosa of different segments of small intestines of young turkeys as influenced by age and diet. Two-day-old poults were fed diets containing no added fat [44.6% starch, 2.2% ether extract by weight (HC)], 10% tallow (T), or 10% corn oil [(CO) 29.0% starch, 10.9% ether extract]. Diets HC, T, and CO were calculated to contain 2,705, 3,083, and 3,196 kcal ME/kg, respectively, and constant protein, TSAA, and lysine:ME ratios were maintained. Appreciable maltase and isomaltase specific activities (micromoles of substrate hydrolyzed per milligram protein per hour) were observed in 2-day-old poults, and activities of these enzymes increased in poults fed the HC diet through 7 and 14 days, respectively. At 2 days, specific activity of
sucrase
was low, and trehalase activity was not detected. Sucrase activity increased steadily through 28 days of age in poults fed the HC diet.
Trehalase
activity was detected at 7 days of age and reached a maximum by Day 21 after hatch. By Day 28, trehalase activity had disappeared from all segments except for the proximal jejunum. In 28-day-old poults fed the HC diet, specific activities of all disaccharidases were greatest in the jejunal segments; i.e., 21, 1.06, 7.24, and .034 mumol/mg protein/h for maltase,
sucrase
, isomaltase, and trehalase, respectively, in the proximal jejunum. Poults fed the T or CO diets had significantly lower disaccharidase activities than did those fed the HC diet, beginning at 7 days of age. Changes in specific activities of disaccharidases as related to age or diet or both were not always parallel, suggesting that each enzyme may be regulated by or affected by diet in a partly independent way.
...
PMID:Intestinal disaccharidases of young turkeys: temporal development and influence of diet composition. 264 74
Intestinal disaccharidases in amniotic fluid were studied in 41 pregnancies with a recurrence risk for cystic fibrosis (CF). In 11 out of 13 pregnancies with CF fetuses the maltase and
sucrase
activities were either below the control range (8 cases) or below the 10th percentile of control values (3 cases).
Trehalase
and lactase were slightly less informative indicators of CF. Of the other 28 pregnancies 3 had low amniotic fluid activities of several intestinal enzymes and were terminated, 12 resulted in the birth of a healthy child and 13 are continuing. The findings in fetal CF suggest an impairment of the defaecation of intestinal contents into the amniotic fluid. Reduced or low amniotic fluid disaccharidase activities were also found in other fetal disorders with demonstrated or presumed intestinal anomalies: e.g. anal atresia (2 cases), anencephaly (3 our of the 7 cases), trisomy 13 (5 cases), trisomy 18 (3 of the 5 cases) and trisomy 21 (19 of the 22 cases). Reduced amniotic fluid disaccharidase activities, although not specific for CF, are highly informative in pregnancies at high risk for CF. Using the 10th percentile of the normal range for amniotic fluid disaccharidase activities as an action line, the sensitivity of CF detection is estimated at 80 to 90 per cent, which could in high risk pregnancies reduce the risk of having another affected child from 1 in 4 to 1 in 20.
...
PMID:Amniotic fluid disaccharidases in the prenatal detection of cystic fibrosis. 399 66
The postnatal development of the gastric mucosa was observed in Long Evans rats. In both pyloric and fundic mucosae, the mitotic index peaked at 5 days of age and then gradually decreased to reach a constant level from 14 days of age onward (P less than 0.05), the germinal region shifted from the deeper area of the mucosae upward to the middle layer. The number of parietal cells increased gradually (P less than 0.05). Gastric pH on the mucosal surface decreased from 6 on the day of birth to about 4 at 7 days of age and to about 2 at 28 days of age. The inverse relationship between the number of parietal cells and pH value on gastric mucosa was found to be highly significant (P less than 0.01).
Trehalase
and
sucrase
activities were observed at 7 days of age and lactase and maltase activities from 0 to 14 days of age. In the pyloric mucosae, foveolae containing goblet cells which were positive for Alcian blue-PAS and HID were observed between 0 and 7 days of age. These cells disappeared by 14 days of age concurrently with the decrease in pH value and increase in the number of parietal cells.
...
PMID:pH-related differentiation in the epithelia of the gastric mucosa of postnatal rats. 403 97
1. The levels of the brush-border enzymes
sucrase
(sucrose glucohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.48), isomaltase (oligo-1,6-glucosidase, EC 3.2.1.10), maltases 2 and 3 (glucoamylase, EC 3.2.1.3), lactase (beta-galactosidase, EC 3.2.1.23) and trehalase (EC 3.2.1.28) and adsorbed pancreatic alpha-amylase (EC 3.2.1.1) have been measured at twenty-one positions along the small intestines of eighty-four pigs of different ages ranging from 3 weeks to 4.5 years. The state of dilation of the intestine at the sampling points was noted. 2. The levels of
sucrase
and isomaltase increased with age throughout the age-range studied.
Trehalase
and the glucoamylases increased with age up to 200--300 d of age. Lactase decreased with age over the whole age range. 3. For the pigs above 10 weeks of age, the distribution pattern of the brush-border enzymes along the intestine did not change with age. Each enzyme had a characteristic distribution curve, with low values at the proximal and distal ends and a peak which was proximal in the instance of lactase and trehalase and approximately mid-way along the gut with
sucrase
, isomaltase and the glucoamylases. 4. The pattern of distribution of the brush-border enzymes altered with age in the piglets, but approached the adult pattern by 8 weeks. 5. Piglets weaned at 3 weeks had higher levels of
sucrase
, isomaltase and glucoamylases at 5 weeks than piglets left on the sow. At 8 weeks of age the piglets weaned at 3 weeks still had higher
sucrase
and isomaltase levels than those on the sow. 6. There was a very close correlation between the
sucrase
and isomaltase levels, and between the maltase 2 and maltase 3 levels in all the samples, and a fairly close correlation between all these four enzymes. 7. The level of alpha-amylase increased with age but showed no regular distribution pattern, its irregular fluctuations being related to the presence or absence of dilation of the intestine at the time of slaughter rather than to the position along the intestine.
...
PMID:The level of distribution of carbohydrases in the small intestine mucosa of pigs from 3 weeks of age to maturity. 696 56
This article presents the activity of carbohydratases and proteases in the midgut of Cameraria ohridella larvae--an oligophagous pest whose preferred feeding is horse chestnuts leaves. Optimal media pH of the assayed enzymes were similar to those of other Lepidopterans. Relatively high amylase activity, as well as maltase and
sucrase
activities, indicates that starch and sucrose are the main digested saccharides.
Trehalase
activity was similar to that described in other Lepidopterans. Activities of glycosidases were significantly lower than those of disaccharidases what suggests that neither cellulose nor glycosides are important for C. ohridella. Trypsin is the main endoprotease of this pest. Like in other leaf-eaters carboxypeptidase activity was higher than that of aminopeptidase. The activity of the majority of examined enzymes increased in the following successive pest generations, which could be explained by the decreased nutritional value of older leaves. Probably this phenomenon in hydrolases activity in Cameraria is a nonspecific mechanism present at this stage of co-evolution of the horse chestnut and its pest.
...
PMID:Digestive enzymes activity in larvae of Cameraria ohridella (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae). 2096 42