Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.4.22.36 (
caspase-1
)
6,285
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To determine the nutritional role of nucleotides, the in vitro and in vivo effects of exogenous nucleotides on the development of intestine were investigated. First, the in vitro effects of nucleotides on the proliferation and maturation of enterocytes were studied by using a human colon tumor cell line (Caco-2) and a rat normal small intestinal crypt cell line (IEC-6). Second, the in vivo effects of nucleotides were also studied in early weaned rats fed nucleotide-unsupplemented or high-nucleotide-supplemented diet. Nucleotide composition resembled that of human milk (CMP:UMP:AMP:IMP:GMP = 10:1:1:1:1, in weight). Nucleotide supplement did not enhance Caco-2 cells proliferation; however, it significantly enhanced
maltase
and sucrase activities. In contrast, nucleotides supplement enhanced
ICE
-6 cells proliferation and
maltase
activity. CMP, predominantly contained in the mixture, enhanced most effectively the proliferation and maturation of cells. In the in vivo experiment, nucleotides significantly enhanced sucrase activity in the intestinal mucosa of early weaned rats. The results presented here suggest that a nucleotide supplement may enhance enterocyte proliferation and/or maturation in vivo and in vitro. Therefore exogenous nucleotides may play an important role in the development of the intestine.
...
PMID:In vitro and in vivo effects of exogenous nucleotides on the proliferation and maturation of intestinal epithelial cells. 1036 Feb 45
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae alg12delta mutant accumulates oligosaccharide lipid with a Man(7)GlcNAc(2) oligosaccharide. To determine the N-glycan structures present on S. cerevisiae glycoproteins in the alg12delta strain, we made attempts to purify external invertase, a highly glycosylated secreted protein. These efforts revealed that, in the alg12delta background, external invertase was mildly hypoglycosylated and rapidly destroyed proteolytically. Although secreted alg9delta invertase was more severely hypoglycosylated than the alg12delta form, it was paradoxically stable during purification. The loss of periplasmic invertase was prevented by addition of pepstatin A to the cell cultures, suggesting that aspartyl proteases were active. We found that during overexpression of invertase in alg12delta yeast, sufficient
protease A
was mistargeted to the periplasmic space, where it hydrolyzed the invertase. Even though alg9delta invertase is underglycosylated in comparison to the alg12delta form, it is more stable because in this genetic background much less
protease A
is secreted compared to alg12delta cells. These observations may be relevant to studies using other extracellular proteins (e.g., mating factors,
alpha-glucosidase
) as probes when characterizing glycosylation defects in yeast.
...
PMID:Hypoglycosylation in the alg12delta yeast mutant destabilizes protease A and causes proteolytic loss of external invertase. 1246 Sep 38
We investigated whether bovine milk constituents influenced glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-2 secretion and intestinal growth in suckling rats. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (14 d old) received i.g. infusions of a milk protein fraction, a lactose solution, or the cream fraction of milk. The serum concentration of GLP-2, but not GLP-1, markedly increased in rats administered milk protein compared with those given the lactose solution or the cream fraction from 60 to 120 min after administration. In another experiment, both casein (CN) and whey protein isolate stimulated GLP-2 secretion at 120 min after administration, but soy protein and ovalbumin did not. Stimulation of GLP-2 secretion by several milk proteins was similar, including alpha-CN, alpha-lactalbumin (alpha-La), and beta-lactoglobulin, in a separate experiment. A hydrolysate of alpha-La obtained by incubation with
protease A
extracted from Aspergillus oryzae (LaHPA) caused almost twice the GLP-2 release due to intact alpha-La and other alpha-La hydrolysates. Free amino acid concentrations and molecular size distributions did not differ among alpha-La hydrolysates, including LaHPA. In rat pups reared with milk formulae containing alpha-La or LaHPA, LaHPA significantly promoted small intestinal elongation and increased the number of crypt epithelial cells compared with a formula containing intact alpha-La. LaHPA administration also increased the
maltase
:lactase activity ratio, a marker of maturation of the intestinal mucosa. In conclusion, milk proteins stimulate GLP-2 secretion and contribute to growth and maturation of the small intestine in suckling rats.
...
PMID:alpha-Lactalbumin hydrolysate stimulates glucagon-like peptide-2 secretion and small intestinal growth in suckling rats. 1949 23