Literature DB >> 8931641

L-arabinose selectively inhibits intestinal sucrase in an uncompetitive manner and suppresses glycemic response after sucrose ingestion in animals.

K Seri1, K Sanai, N Matsuo, K Kawakubo, C Xue, S Inoue.   

Abstract

The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of L-arabinose on intestinal alpha-glucosidase activities in vitro and to evaluate its effects on postprandial glycemic responses in vivo. L-Arabinose inhibited the sucrase activity of intestinal mucosa in an uncompetitive manner (Ki, 2 mmol/L). Neither the optical isomer D-arabinose nor the disaccharide L-arabinobiose inhibited sucrase activity, whereas D-xylose was as potent as L-arabinose in inhibiting this activity. L-Arabinose and D-xylose showed no inhibitory effect on the activities of intestinal maltase, isomaltase, trehalase, lactase, and glucoamylase, or pancreatic amylase. In contrast, a known alpha-glucosidase inhibitor, acarbose, competitively inhibited (Ki, 1.1 mumol/L) sucrase activity and also inhibited intestinal maltase, glucoamylase, and pancreatic amylase. L-Arabinose suppressed the increase of blood glucose after sucrose loading dose-dependently in mice (ED50, 35 mg/kg), but showed no effect after starch loading. The suppressive effect of D-xylose on the increase of blood glucose after sucrose loading was 2.4 times less than that of L-arabinose, probably due to intestinal absorption of the former. Acarbose strongly suppressed glycemic responses in both sucrose loading (ED50, 1.1 mg/kg) and starch loading (ED50, 1.7 mg/kg) in mice. L-Arabinose suppressed the increase of plasma glucose and insulin in rats after sucrose loading, the suppression of the former being uninterruptedly observed in mice for 3 weeks. Thus, the results demonstrated that L-arabinose selectively inhibits intestinal sucrase activity in an uncompetitive manner and suppresses the glycemic response after sucrose ingestion by inhibition of sucrase activity.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8931641     DOI: 10.1016/s0026-0495(96)90117-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Metabolism        ISSN: 0026-0495            Impact factor:   8.694


  38 in total

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9.  Crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of exo-alpha-1,5-L-arabinofuranosidase from Streptomyces avermitilis NBRC14893.

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10.  d-Psicose Inhibits Intestinal alpha-Glucosidase and Suppresses the Glycemic Response after Ingestion of Carbohydrates in Rats.

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