Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of long-term starvation on the activities of sucrase, lactase, and aminopeptidase, and on their respective mRNA were determined in the small intestine of thyroidectomized and sham-operated adult rats. Thyroidectomy reduced the protein loss at the level of the intestinal brush border membranes during starvation. Prolonged fasting caused a significant decrease in sucrase activity, but thyroidectomy partly prevented this effect. However, the amount of the corresponding mRNA dropped during long term starvation without incidence of thyroidectomy. Lactase activity in the brush border membranes was increased by starvation, and thyroidectomy caused a further elevation of the enzyme activity. Simultaneously, lactase mRNA content rose only slightly compared to the enzyme activity. Aminopeptidase activity and mRNA content decreased during starvation and thyroidectomy did not prevent this process. These results indicate that intestinal hydrolases respond non-coordinately to long-term food deprivation. In addition, the thyroid status of the animals has a direct influence on the adaptation of several brush border hydrolases to starvation. This suggests that the drop in plasma thyroid hormones during fasting allows a better maintenance of protein content and of hydrolase activities in the brush border membranes of the small intestine. These adaptive processes seemed to be partly controlled at a post-transcriptional level.
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PMID:Adaptation of intestinal hydrolases to starvation in rats: effect of thyroid function. 193 43

Seventy-two hour starvation in neonatal rabbits was studied. Fasted animals received no feeds, only water every 8 h for 72 h. Fed animals were suckled by the dam. There was no difference in birth weight, serum albumin, blood urea nitrogen, electrolytes, or urine specific gravity between fed and fasted animals. Weight at 72 hr was less in fasted (p less than 0.01) than fed rabbits. Serum cortisol (p less than 0.05) and corticosterone (p less than 0.01) levels were higher in the fasted group. Proximal and distal small bowel homogenates had less DNA and protein (p less than 0.01) in the fasted group, but the protein/DNA ratio was the same in the proximal and distal small bowel homogenates from both groups. Sucrase (E.C.3.2.1.26) specific activity was significantly increased in proximal small bowel homogenates from the fasted group (p less than 0.01) but was the same in distal small bowel homogenates from both groups. Sucrase total activity per proximal segment was the same in fed and fasted animals but was significantly less per segment in distal small bowel homogenates from fasted animals. Alkaline phosphatase (E.C.3.1.3) total and specific activity was decreased in proximal (p less than 0.01) and distal (p less than 0.05) small bowel homogenates from the fasted group. Lactase (E.C.3.2.1.23) total activity was decreased in proximal and distal (p less than 0.01) small bowel homogenates from the fasted group but lactase specific activity was unchanged. Thus, a brief period of malnutrition in neonatal animals can result in a variety of regional functional changes in the gastrointestinal mucosa.
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PMID:Short-term malnutrition in neonatal rabbits. I. Brush border enzymes. 368 82

Activities of lactase and sucrase were determined in proximal, middle, and distal thirds of the jejunoileum of 15-wk-old male rats starved for 1, 2, and 3 days and in rats fed a high-sucrose diet for 24 h after 3 days of starvation. Sucrase activity (expressed per tissue protein or DNA as well as per intestinal segment) showed a progressive decrease during starvation in proximal and middle segments but not in the distal segment. Lactase activity expressed per tissue protein or DNA in all segments increased significantly. This was obviously due to the loss of tissue protein and DNA because total lactase activity per segment did not change. Refeeding the sucrose diet produced an increase of sucrase activity without influencing lactase activity. In serial tissue homogenate of jejunal villus-crypt columns prepared using cryostat sectioning, it was shown that, during starvation, activity of lactase (specific and total) increased in the upper and middle villus. Sucrase activity (specific and total) during starvation decreased and after refeeding increased in the lower and middle villus.
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PMID:Different effect of starvation on activity of sucrase and lactase in rat jejunoileum. 640 78

Aminopeptidase, lactase and sucrase activities have been followed during 5 days in the jejunum and in the ileum of starved adult rats. Enzyme activities have been determined in the mucosal homogenates as well as in the purified brush border membranes and expressed as activities per intestinal length (segmental activities) or as activities per milligram of protein (specific activities). The segmental and specific activity of aminopeptidase was increased in the ileum during the first 2 days of starvation, suggesting that aminopeptidase may have during the first days of starvation a conservative role by preventing an important loss of tissue protein. In all conditions, lactase activity was strikingly enhanced by starvation whereas sucrase activity showed no changes or decreased activity. Lactase stimulation was initiated during the first 24 h of starvation reaching its maximum after 2 days. The various experimental conditions leading to a specific or to a nonspecific stimulation of intestinal lactase activity have been discussed.
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PMID:Modifications of brush border enzyme activities during starvation in the jejunum and ileum of adult rats. 715 74