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Usage Information

Effect of Diet upon Intestinal Disaccharidases and Disaccharide Absorption
J. J. Deren, … , S. A. Broitman, N. Zamcheck
J. J. Deren, … , S. A. Broitman, N. Zamcheck
Published February 1, 1967
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1967;46(2):186-195. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI105521.
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Research Article

Effect of Diet upon Intestinal Disaccharidases and Disaccharide Absorption

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Abstract

The administration of a carbohydrate-containing diet for 24 hours to rats previously fasted for 3 days led to a twofold increase in total intestinal sucrase and sucrase specific activity. The specific activity of maltase was similarly increased, but lactase activity was unaffected. The sucrose-containing diet led to a greater increase in sucrase than maltase activity, whereas the converse was true of the maltose-containing diet. A carbohydrate-free isocaloric diet led to a slight increase in the total intestinal sucrase, but sucrase specific activity was unchanged. Assay of sucrase activity of mixed homogenates from casein-fed and sucrose-fed rats or fasted and sucrose-fed animals yielded activities that were additive. The Michaelis constant (Km) of the enzyme hydrolyzing sucrose was similar in the fasted, casein-fed, and sucrose-fed rats. The maximal velocity (Vmax) was twice greater in sucrose-fed as compared to casein-fed or fasted rats, suggesting an increased quantity of enzyme subsequent to sucrose feeding.

Authors

J. J. Deren, S. A. Broitman, N. Zamcheck

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Usage data is cumulative from June 2024 through June 2025.

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Text version 162 5
PDF 55 39
Scanned page 410 4
Citation downloads 50 0
Totals 677 48
Total Views 725
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