Background And Study Aims: The usefulness of a new quick test for endoscopic diagnosis of adult-type hypolactasia was tested in duodenal biopsies. In this test, an endoscopic biopsy from the postbulbar duodenum is incubated with lactose on a test plate, and a color reaction develops within 20 min as a result of hydrolyzed lactose (a positive result) in patients with normolactasia, whereas no reaction (a negative result) develops in patients with severe hypolactasia.
Patients And Methods: Two postbulbar duodenal biopsies were taken from 80 prospectively enrolled adult outpatients with dyspepsia. The biopsies were used for the Quick Lactase Test (Biohit PLC, Helsinki, Finland) and in biochemical disaccharidase (lactase, sucrase, and maltase) assays. In addition, the C/T (-13,910) genotype was determined from DNA extracted from gastric antral biopsies using polymerase chain reaction sequencing in genomic analysis of adult-type hypolactasia.
Results: Twenty-one of 22 patients (95 %; 95 % CI, 87 - 100 %) with biochemical lactase activity < 10 U/g protein, but none of the 58 patients with lactase activity of 10 U/g protein or more had a negative result in the Quick Lactase Test. Seven of the 80 patients (9 %; 95 % CI, 3 - 15 %) had a Quick Lactase Test result that indicated mild hypolactasia (a mild color reaction). All patients with celiac disease (n = 6) had a negative Quick Lactase Test result. Nine of 74 patients (six patients with celiac disease were excluded) had a CC (-13,910) genotype in genomic testing, indicating adult-type hypolactasia. All of them had negative test results with the Quick Lactase Test. Twenty-six patients had a TT genotype, indicating normolactasia, and none of these patients had a negative test result in the Quick Lactase Test. Six of 39 patients (15 %; 95 % CI, 4 - 27 %) with a CT genotype had a negative result in the Quick Lactase Test.
Conclusions: The Quick Lactase Test effectively identifies patients with severe duodenal hypolactasia. In comparison with CC (adult-type hypolactasia) and TT individuals (normolactasia), the sensitivity and specificity of the Quick Lactase Test result was 100 %. In comparison with biochemical lactase assays, the sensitivity and specificity of a negative Quick Lactase Test for indicating hypolactasia (lactase activity < 10 U/g protein) were 95 % (95 % CI, 87 - 100 %) and 100 %, respectively.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-2006-925354 | DOI Listing |
ACS Synth Biol
February 2024
Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois at Urbana─Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States.
Protein degron tags have proven to be uniquely useful for the characterization of gene function. Degrons can mediate quick depletion, usually within minutes, of a protein of interest, allowing researchers to characterize cellular responses to the loss of function. To develop a general-purpose degron tool in , we sought to build upon a previously characterized system of SspB-dependent inducible protein degradation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
November 2023
Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Protein degron tags have proven uniquely useful for characterization of gene function. Degrons mediate quick depletion, usually within minutes, of a protein of interest - allowing researchers to characterize cellular responses to the loss of function. To develop a general purpose degron tool in , we sought to build upon a previously characterized system of SspB-dependent inducible protein degradation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Biol Med
June 2023
Department of General Surgery of Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Institute of Digestive Surgery, Shanghai Key Laboratory for Gastric Neoplasms, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine, Shanghai 200025, China.
Objective: Organoids are a powerful tool with broad application prospects in biomedicine. Notably, they provide alternatives to animal models for testing potential drugs before clinical trials. However, the number of passages for which organoids maintain cellular vitality remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
April 2023
Department of Animal Biology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
In the 1980s, it was found that addition of N-terminal Arg to proteins induces their ubiquitination and degradation by the N-end rule pathway. While this mechanism applies only to the proteins which also have other features of the N-degron (including a closely adjacent Lys that is accessible for ubiquitination), several test substrates have been found to follow this mechanism very efficiently after ATE1-dependent arginylation. Such property enabled researchers to test ATE1 activity in cells indirectly by assaying for the degradation of such arginylation-dependent substrates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurogastroenterol Motil
January 2023
Department of Internal Medicine, St. Vincent's Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Korea.
Background/aims: Lactase deficiency, which has many similarities with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), causes various gastrointestinal symptoms. We estimate the prevalence of SIBO in patients with intestinal symptoms from dairy products and investigate the association between lactase deficiency (LD) and SIBO.
Methods: This prospective study included patients with functional intestinal symptoms from dairy product indigestion.
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