Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Starvation
overnight and
starvation
for 48 h reduced the weight and the protein content of mucosal scrapings, but only minimally reduced the DNA content of the mucosal scrapings. The activity of sucrase and maltase was reduced by both periods of
starvation
. The activity of
lactase
and of acid and alkaline phosphatase, however, was less subject to
starvation
. There were striking differences in the response to
starvation
between the proximal, mid and distal third of the small intestine. The importance of the proper reference system was discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of starvation on small intestinal enzyme activity in germ-free rats. 10 66
Intestinal DNA, RNA, and protein content were decreased to a greater extent than was body weight when rats were starved for 3 days. Specific
lactase
and maltase activity increased with progressively longer periods of
starvation
. Antral and serum gastrin concentration significantly decreased during the 3 days of
starvation
. Pentagastrin (250 mug/kg 3 times daily) was injected into a group of rats for the duration of a 3-day
starvation
period and caused a small but significant increase in the relative intestinal RNA and protein content and decreased
lactase
and maltase specific activities in comparison with the levels of 3-day starved controls. Pentagastrin thus partially reversed some of the
starvation
-induced changes toward fed levels. Thus, a deficiency in the trophic hormone gastrin may be partially responsible for the disproportionate changes in intestinal tissue during
starvation
.
...
PMID:Relationship between the changes in gastrin levels and intestinal properties in the starved rat. 125 47
In the rat,
starvation
lowers jejunal sucrase activity and increases or has no effect upon jejunal
lactase
activity. The mechanism by which
starvation
influences these intrinsic microvillus proteins remains unclear. Jejunal sucrase and
lactase
activities were studied during
starvation
or refeeding after a three-day fast. Using polyclonal monospecific antibodies, sucrase-isomaltase (SI) and lactase-phlorizin hydrolase (LPH) protein contents were measured in parallel to determine changes in enzyme activation. Sucrase activity and SI protein fell after two and three days of fasting and rose during refeeding. In contrast,
lactase
activity and jejunal LPH content increased after
starvation
and decreased after refeeding for 48 hr. For both enzymes, changes in catalytic activity and protein content occurred in parallel. [3H]Leucine incorporation studies in vivo showed more labeling of immunoprecipitable LPH than SI during
starvation
, but refeeding induced relatively more labeling of SI than of LPH. Therefore,
starvation
and refeeding produce opposing effects upon jejunal
lactase
and sucrase activities by modulating LPH and SI protein production and not by modifying enzyme activation.
...
PMID:Effects of starvation and refeeding on jejunal disaccharidase activity. 158 86
This study shows the distribution of the messenger RNA for lactase-phlorizin hydrolase during postnatal development and along the longitudinal axis of the rat small intestine. At birth, this messenger RNA was present along the whole length of small intestine, and its concentration remained elevated during the suckling period despite the concomitant decrease in enzyme activity. At weaning, the amount of
lactase
messenger RNA dropped specifically in the distal ileum. This decrease in
lactase
messenger RNA was initiated at the ileocecal junction, progressed gradually towards the jejunum, and followed the decrease in
lactase
activity several days later.
Starvation
and refeeding were also found to cause modifications of
lactase
activity and messenger RNA expression that were prominent in the distal part of small intestine. These data support that posttranscriptional and pretranslational levels of regulation are required to define the spatial and temporal expression of
lactase
in the rat small intestine.
...
PMID:Lactase expression is controlled differently in the jejunum and ileum during development in rats. 189 50
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.
...
PMID:Adaptation of intestinal hydrolases to starvation in rats: effect of thyroid function. 193 43
To compare the tropic effect of different dietary nutrients on mucosal adaptation in the jejunum and ileum, adult rats were submitted to a 96-h period of
starvation
and refed isocaloric liquid diets (1.5 kcal ml-1) containing either protein (casein), carbohydrate (starch) or lipids. In the jejunum, 4 days of
starvation
caused mucosal hypoplasia, villus and crypt shortening and a decrease in the total activity of disaccharidases with the exception of
lactase
which was markedly enhanced. In contrast, mucosal hypoplasia was incomplete in the ileum which exhibited an increase in crypt depth and in the specific and total activities of disaccharidases and of aminopeptidase. Compared with protein and carbohydrates, lipids exerted the strongest stimulatory effect for mucosal regeneration. In the jejunum as well as in the ileum, mucosal mass parameters, villus length, crypt depth and
lactase
activity did reverse towards their initial value within 1-3 days of refeeding lipids, even though the animals received only one-third of their normal daily caloric intake. Our results indicate that the pattern of response to fasting differs between the proximal and distal small intestine, and that the intestinal changes induced by
starvation
are rapidly reversed by refeeding small amounts of a diet rich in fat.
...
PMID:Refeeding after starvation in the rat: comparative effects of lipids, proteins and carbohydrates on jejunal and ileal mucosal adaptation. 212 4
The accumulation profile of intestinal
lactase
mRNA was investigated in suckling and adult rats and pigs. We found no correlation between the
lactase
enzymatic activity and the accumulation of the messenger at both developmental stages. Modulation of
lactase
activity by
starvation
or thyroxine treatment had no effect on
lactase
mRNA accumulation in the rat intestine. These results confirm that thyroxine modulates
lactase
expression essentially at the post-transcriptional level.
...
PMID:Discrepancy between the intestinal lactase enzymatic activity and mRNA accumulation in sucklings and adults. Effect of starvation and thyroxine treatment. 249 26
Adult rats starved for 48 h received a daily injection of thyroxine over a 3-day period before they were killed. When compared to nourished animals,
starvation
provoked a 4- to 5-fold increase in immunoreactive
lactase
protein, which paralleled a similar stimulation of
lactase
activity in the brush border membranes of the proximal jejunum. Exogenous thyroxine completely inhibited the
starvation
-induced increase in immunoreactive
lactase
protein in both the intracellular and the brush border membranes.
...
PMID:Modulation by thyroxine of the amount of lactase protein in the jejunum of adult rats. 310 Feb 92
The effects of
starvation
on intestinal disaccharidase activities and disaccharide absorption were studied in rats. Adult male rats were starved for either 16 or 72 h and the specific activity of
lactase
and sucrase was determined together with the absorption of lactose, sucrose, and glucose in vitro by the everted sac technique. The specific activity of
lactase
was significantly higher and the specific activity of sucrase was lower in the 72-h starved animals when compared with the 16-h starved group. The higher specific
lactase
activity in the 72-h starved animals was reflected in enhanced absorption of lactose as determined by the transfer of the constituent monosaccharides into the serosal fluid. The transfer of glucose into the serosal fluid by the glucose sac was also higher in the 72-h starved rats but not to the same extent as that of lactose. The absorption of sucrose was not significantly different between the two groups of animals. This study shows that the increase of intestinal
lactase
activity induced by
starvation
of adult rats correlates with in vitro increased lactose absorption.
...
PMID:Dependency of lactose absorption on lactase activity in starved rats. 313 Jan 73
Effects of diet, hibernation and seasonal variations on hydrolase activities were determined in mucosa and purified brush border membranes of the small intestine of European hamsters. Wild hamsters captured in April and fed for several weeks with an equilibrated laboratory chow (20% protein, 50% carbohydrates) exhibited a rise in disaccharidase activities (sucrase, isomaltase,
lactase
) but no changes in aminopeptidase N activity. During deep hibernation, in contrast to sucrase and isomaltase activities which showed only minor changes,
lactase
activity was significantly enhanced along the jejunoileum, and aminopeptidase N activity was maximum in the ileum. After a short period (48 h) of wakefulness and feeding following 10 days of
starvation
during the hibernation period, the activities of the disaccharidases and of aminopeptidase N returned to values measured in active animals. In contrast to the nutritional state, which has an important impact on the activities of intestinal enzymes, season has little effect on the intestine of the active animal under a controlled environment. The pattern of enzyme activities which occurs along the small intestine in the hibernating animal may be a prerequisite for optimum digestion during the short phases of waking during the hibernation period of the European hamster.
...
PMID:Adaptation of intestinal enzymes to seasonal and dietary changes in a hibernator: the European hamster (Cricetus cricetus). 317 Aug 22
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