Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The ability of adapting ileal enterocytes to express different digestive enzymes in their brush border membranes was tested in young female Wistar rats (n = 72) receiving 60% proximal small bowel resection. In control rats with intestinal transection both neutral aminopeptidase and alpha-glucosidase activities were shown, by quantitative cytochemistry, to increase during enterocyte migration over the lower part of the villus; thereafter enzyme activities declined or remained approximately constant. Proximal enterectomy increased the amount of alpha-glucosidase but not neutral aminopeptidase activity appearing during early enterocyte development. Thymidine labelled autoradiography showed that the rate of enterocyte migration along the ileal villus nearly doubled after jejunal resection (19.3 v 11.1 microns/h). Nevertheless, the time taken for both peptidase and saccharidase activities to appear at maximal rates in the brush border membrane was diminished by about five hours. Thus ileal enterocytes adapt to proximal small bowel resection by selective increments in enzyme expression, findings that contradict the previous hypothesis of simple metabolic immaturity.
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PMID:Increased activity of digestive enzymes in ileal enterocytes adapting to proximal small bowel resection. 288 50

Intestinal epithelial brush border hydrolases are important and sensitive enzyme markers of gastrointestinal development and function. Little is know about the mechanisms that regulate the induction of these enzymes during human fetal development, as these events occur primarily in utero. The present work used ectopically grafted human fetal jejunal xenografts (median age,13.3 wk of gestation), maintained in severe-combined immunodeficient mice, to study the differential expression of five different hydrolases after 10 wk of xenotransplantation. The spatio-temporal distribution of brush border alkaline phosphatase, aminopeptidase-N, alpha-glucosidase, lactase-phlorizin hydrolase, and dipeptidyl peptidase IV enzyme activities were measured quantitatively using scanning microdensitometry along the crypt-villus axes of fetal, xenograft, and pediatric (median age, 34 mo) biopsies. Ectopic grafting of fetal jejunum closely recapitulated the development of these enzymes in utero, with alkaline phosphatase, aminopeptidase-N, alpha-glucosidase, and dipeptidyl peptidase IV enzyme activities closely matching the spatio-temporal distribution and levels recorded in pediatric duodenal biopsies. Lactase-phlorizin hydrolase was the only enzyme not to reach values recorded in pediatric brush border membranes, although activities were significantly (5.6-fold) higher than in pretransplanted fetal bowel. Human jejunal xenografts therefore demonstrate an appropriate developmental induction of brush border hydrolase activity and may represent a useful model to study trans-acting factors that promote human epithelial differentiation and function in vivo. Characterization of such agents may be of potential therapeutic use in the treatment of diseases associated with gastrointestinal immaturity, notably necrotizing enterocolitis.
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PMID:Developmental regulation of intestinal epithelial hydrolase activity in human fetal jejunal xenografts maintained in severe-combined immunodeficient mice. 1147 3