Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Enteropeptidase converts trypsinogen into active trypsin, which not only hydrolyses some peptide bonds of food proteins but also activates a number of pancreatic zymogens. For this reason enteropeptidase is a key enzyme in the digestion of dietary proteins and its absence may result in gross protein malabsorption.
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PMID:The role of enteropeptidase in the digestion of protein and its development in human fetal small intestine. 39 33

Two trypsin assay methods for the estimation of this enzyme in duodenal fluid from children have been compared. Assay results for a fluorometric method based on the use of N-carbobenzoxy-diglycyl-L-arginyl-2-naphthylamide hydrochloride (GANA) as the trypsin substrate were found to correlate well (r = 0.91, P less than 0.001) with those obtained with a much less sensitive titrimetric assay which used benzoylarginine ethylester hydrochloride (BAEE) as substrate. The higher sensitivity of the fluorometric assay has allowed accurate determination of trypsin activity in 10 microliter aliquots of duodenal fluid. This low volume requirement makes the assay suitable for studies on infants of all ages and conserves duodenal fluid for use in other investigations often warranted during the assessment of childhood malabsorption. The fluorometric assay has also been used to monitor the separation of enteropeptidase from trypsin(ogen) by chromatography on Sephacryl S-200 in samples of duodenal fluid from two children. Different proteolytic pathway deficiencies were confirmed in these children.
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PMID:Fluorometric microassay of trypsin and enteropeptidase in children--comparison with a titrimetic assay. 639 83

We report on a 40-yr-old man with both primary enteropeptidase deficiency and celiac disease. He suffered from severe intestinal malabsorption and growth failure as a child. Enteropeptidase deficiency was found and pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy resulted in a growth spurt. Enteropeptidase levels in his intestinal mucosa and intraluminal fluid remained very low throughout childhood and early adult life. Celiac disease was confirmed by characteristic abnormalities in tests of intestinal function and in mucosal biopsies, which recovered when he instituted a gluten-free diet. He remains clinically intolerant to gluten as an adult. Enteropeptidase levels have remained abnormally low whether or not his intestinal mucosa has been normal in response to gluten restriction. Enteropeptidase levels have previously been shown to be normal in untreated celiac patients. The relationship between the two disorders remains unclear.
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PMID:Celiac disease in a patient with a congenital deficiency of intestinal enteropeptidase. 1146 62