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1.
This study investigated the effects of two putative bombesin antagonists, [D-Arg1,D-Pro2,D-Trp7,9,Leu11]substance P and [Leu13-psi-CH2NH-Leu14]bombesin, on bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from isolated canine G cells following short-term culture. Canine antral tissue was dispersed by sequential collagenase and EDTA treatment, and counterflow elutriation was used to enrich for G cells. Plates were seeded with 2 x 10(6) cells/mL in each well and cultured for 2 days prior to testing. Gastrin-containing and somatostatin-containing cells were identified by immunocytochemistry using the biotin-avidin-peroxidase method and accounted for 8.5 and 1%, respectively, of adhered cells. Basal gastrin secretion was 1.91 +/- 0.48% of total cell content. After a 2-h incubation period, bombesin (0.01-100 pM) stimulated gastrin release in a concentration-dependent fashion. The substance P analog, at a concentration of 1 microM, modestly inhibited bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from canine G cells. This analog also produced weak stimulation of basal gastrin release. In contrast, the bombesin analog, at a concentration of 1 microM, did not affect basal gastrin secretion. The bombesin analog completely blocked bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from 0.01 to 1 pM and produced greater than 50% inhibition at higher doses. The ability of the bombesin analog to directly inhibit bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from cultured canine G cells underscores its usefulness in studies involving the role of bombesin and its mammalian counterpart, gastrin-releasing peptide, in the control of gastrin cell function.  相似文献   

2.
The influence of cadmium on basal and stimulated plasma levels of gastrin, cholecystokinin (CCK), and pancreatic polypeptide (PP) was investigated in conscious dogs using three doses of cadmium (0.15, 0.5, and 0.75 mg Cd/kg-h). Levels of gastrointestinal (GI) hormones were stimulated with bombesin (BBS), a peptide known to stimulate GI hormone release. Plasma cadmium was measured employing atomic absorption spectrophotometry and GI hormone levels were measured with specific radioimmunoassays (RIA). Basal plasma levels of hormones (pg/mL) in the dogs were in the range (mean ± SE): 38±5 to 44±6 for gastrin, 80±25 to 107±17, for CCK and 120±5 to 142±5 for PP; these levels did not change with cadmium. Significant increases above basal levels in all three hormones were found with infusions of BBS and with BBS plus cadmium. Gastrin levels remained steady during Cd and saline after BBS; however, CCK and PP levels dropped to values that were 68 and 73% less than their stimulated peak levels. With reinfusion of BBS, gastrin, CCK, and PP were significantly elevated above basal; however, the peak values for CCK and PP, but not gastrin, were less than those found during the first BBS infusion. The data suggest that in response to bombesin, cadmium has little or no effect on the release of gastrin, but that is exerts a latent effect on the release of both CCK and PP.  相似文献   

3.
The release of gastrin into the serum of five conscious gastric fistula dogs after a meat meal was monitored for 2 hours. Neither the rate of increase in serum gastrin nor the 2 hour cumulative integrated gastrin response was changed by administration of small doses of somatostatin tetradecapeptide (0.5 microgram/kg.hr IV for 2 hr), 16-16 dimethyl prostaglandin E2 (0.25 microgram/kg.hr IV for 2 hr or 1 microgram/kg intragastrically), or bethanechol (20 micrograms/kg.hr IV for 2 hr). Acidification of the food in the antrum to pH 1.2 to 1.4 eliminated serum gastrin release in response to food. In control studies, serum gastrin levels were not altered by IV administration of saline for 2 hr with no food or when a plate of food was held just out of the dogs' reach (teasing). Food-stimulated gastrin release was contrasted with that stimulated by bombesin under identical laboratory conditions [17]. In each case, antral acidification, somatostatin, prostaglandin E2 and bethanechol affected bombesin-stimulated gastrin release differently from that stimulated by food. We conclude that food and bombesin release gastrin by different pathways.  相似文献   

4.
Bombesin-like peptides as well as receptor-independent activators were tested for their effect on gastrin release from acutely dispersed rat gastric G-cells. The amphibian peptide bombesin as well as its mammalian analogues neuromedin B and neuromedin C stimulated gastrin release. Maximal responses were achieved with 10(-9) M bombesin (191.0 +/- 16.8% of basal release), 10(-8) M neuromedin C(205.9 +/- 17.6%) and 10(-7) M neuromedin B (162.2 +/- 10.4%), respectively. The phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol 13-acetate (TPA) and the synthetic diacylglycerol analogue 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol (OAG) are receptor-independent activators of the protein kinase C. Both TPA (10(-6) M) and OAG (10(-5) M) stimulated gastrin release to 214.0 +/- 29.3% and 198.2 +/- 20.8% of basal, respectively. Calcium ionophore A23187 (10(-5) M) was the most effective stimulant tested (364.7 +/- 39.6%). Its effect was reversed by the calmodulin antagonist W 7 (10(-6)-10(-5) M). Finally, forskolin (10(-5) M), a direct activator of cAMP-formation, as well as the cAMP-analogue dbcAMP (10(-3) M) induced gastrin release. IN conclusion, neuromedin B is less potent and less effective than neuromedin C and bombesin in stimulating rat gastric G-cells. In addition, gastrin release is activated by calcium- and phospholipid-dependent as well as by cAMP-induced cellular signal transduction mechanisms.  相似文献   

5.
B.I. Hirschowitz   《Peptides》1980,1(3):217-222
Integrated gastrin response was measured by the serial changes in serum immunoreactive gastrin after various stimuli in three dogs with gastric fistula and highly selective fundic vagotomy, who were then subjected to truncal vagotomy. Truncal vagotomy eliminated the gastrin as well as the gastric acid response to vagal excitation by 2-deoxy-glucose, but did not significantly change the responses to bethanechol (20 or 120 μg/kg/hr by IV infusion). Acid output was the same with bombesin or its nonapeptide in the dogs with fundic vagotomy as it was after subsequent truncal vagotomy, but gastrin release was very much increased by truncal vagotomy. For a 3-hour infusion of bombesin integrated gastrin release was 65 and 143 ng/ml/min and for its nonapeptide 43 and 109 ng/ml/min in the dogs with fundic and truncal vagotomy respectively. The marked hypersensitivity of the gastrin response after truncal vagotomy to bombesin but not to a cholinergic agonist suggests that the antral denervation led to a post-denervation hyper-response to the putative transmitter, bombesin, and that the vagal release of antral gastrin may thus represent a peptidergic neurohormonal mechanism. Also, a long half-life of effect suggests that bombesin binds avidly to its receptors.  相似文献   

6.
We and others have recently reported an involvement of calcium (Ca2+)-mediated intracellular pathways in the release of antral gastrin in response to bombesin (BBS), while cyclic adenosine 3'5'-monophosphate (cAMP) potentiated the gastrin response to BBS. In this study we examined the effect of cyclic nucleotides on BBS-induced gastrin release from isolated perfused rat stomachs. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP, 1 mM), and Rolipram (a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 0.5 microM), stimulated basal gastrin secretion and potentiated BBS-induced gastrin release. The stimulation of gastrin release by BBS was not altered by Wiptide (a cAMP dependent protein kinase inhibitor, 1.0 microM), but was surprisingly inhibited by dbcGMP (1 mM). The cAMP content in antral mucosa or in the perfusates was not changed after infusion of BBS. These findings coupled with previous results suggest that BBS-provoked gastrin release is principally coupled to a Ca2+-mediated intracellular pathway, and that an activation of the adenylate cyclase mediated pathway is not involved. Intracellular cGMP, however, may participate in the negative regulation of gastrin release induced by BBS.  相似文献   

7.
Bombesin, besides many other actions on the mammalian gastroentero-pancreatic tract, strongly stimulates the release of pancreatic-polypeptide (PP) in dogs. In 8 healthy human volunteers (5 males, 3 females), the PP response during bombesin infusion was low (25.7 ± 6.3 peak vs. 5.0 ± 2.0 basal pmol/1) compared to the effect of a protein meal (144.1 ± 13.4 pmol/1) or to the gastrin response to the same dose of the amphibian polypeptide (140.0 ± 23.6 pmol/1 eq SHG 17 I). The response pattern of PP and gastrin was different as PP concentrations peaked 10 min after cessation of bombesin infusion (32.0 ± 4.9 pmol/1) when gastrin concentrations already were down to one third of the maximal response. Atropine inhibited the PP response to bombesin but did not abolish it completely. It is concluded that in man, the total effect of bombesin on PP secretion is minor compared both to the effect of the peptide on gastrin secretion in man and to the effect of bombesin in dogs. It is suggested that bombesin might have a dual, inhibitory-stimulatory, effect on PP secretion in man.  相似文献   

8.
Dose-response studies were performed in 6 human volunteer subjects to determine the threshold and optimal doses of intravenous bombesin for stimulation of gastric acid secretion and gastrin release. A significant stimulation of both acid and gastrin was obtained with a very low dose, 3 pmol · kg?1 · h?1. Peak stimulation of acid secretion (67% of pentagastrin PAO) was obtained at 12.5 pmol · kg?1 · h?1. Serum gastrin response to this dose of bombesinn was similar to that obtained after a high protein meal. Higher doses of bombesin caused further increases in serum gastrin but not in acid secretion. Since very low doses of bombesin, too small to produce detectable increases in immunoreactive serum bombesim, caused parallel increases in gastrin and acid secretion, it is possible that the bombesin-like peptides present in human gastrointestinal tissues contribute to regulation of human gastric secretion.  相似文献   

9.
The effect on gastrin and somatostatin release in sheep of stimulatory and inhibitory peptides and pharmacological agents was investigated using an in vitro preparation of ovine antral mucosa. Carbachol stimulated gastrin release in a dose-dependent manner but had no effect on somatostatin release. As atropine blocked the effect of carbachol, cholinergic agonists appear to stimulate gastrin secretion directly through muscarinic receptors on the G-cell and not by inhibition of somatostatin secretion. Both vasoactive-intestinal peptide (VIP) and gastric-inhibitory peptide (GIP) increased somatostatin release but did not inhibit basal gastrin secretion, although VIP was effective in reducing the gastrin response to Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP). Porcine and human GRP were stimulatory to gastrin secretion in high doses but bombesin was without effect. The relative insensitivity to GRP (not of ovine origin) previously reported from intact sheep may be caused either by a high basal release of somatostatin or by the ovine GRP receptor or peptide differing from those of other mammalian species.  相似文献   

10.
F D Manela  W S Dyer  J Ren  R F Harty 《Life sciences》1992,51(17):1363-1372
In the present study we developed an experimental model for direct assessment of antral endocrine cell and cholinergic neural responses to luminal stimulation. A sleeve of antral mucosal/submucosal tissue was prepared from rat antrum, mounted in perfusion chamber, and perfused in both luminal and submucosal compartments. Morphological and functional integrity of the antral sleeve were confirmed by histological examination and measurement of protein synthesis. Antral gastrin release was assessed in response to luminal stimulation with acid, peptone and distension. Luminal acid (pH3) inhibited basal gastrin release by -70.4% and luminal peptone stimulated gastrin release to 210% above control (p < 0.02). Distention of the antral sleeve by hydrostatic pressure (3-25cm H2O) caused stepwise and significant increase in gastrin release that was reversible. 3H-acetylcholine was stimulated significantly by KCl (56mM) to values twice control. In summary, these results establish the integrity and responsiveness of the antral sleeve to pharmacological and luminal stimulation. The antral sleeve may be a useful model in assessing antral function in response to luminal stimulation.  相似文献   

11.
Two of the most effective stimuli of gastrin release from human antral G cells are bombesin and phorbol esters. Both agonists result in activation of the protein kinase C family of isozymes, however, the exact contribution of protein kinase C to the resultant release of gastrin has been difficult to assess, possibly due to the presence of multiple protein kinase C isozymes in the G cells. The results of the present study demonstrated that the human antral G cells expressed 6 protein kinase C isozymes alpha, gamma, theta, epsilon, zeta, and mu. Of these protein kinase C, gamma and theta were translocated by stimulation of the cells by either 10 nM bombesin or 1 nM phorbol ester. Inhibition of protein kinase Cmu (localized to the Golgi complex) did not decrease bombesin-stimulated gastrin release indicating that this isozyme was not involved in the secretory process. The use of selective antagonists of the calcium-sensitive conventional protein kinase C subgroup resulted in an increase in bombesin-stimulated gastrin release and indicated that protein kinase Cgamma was involved in the desensitization of the bombesin response.  相似文献   

12.
The present studies were directed to examine the effect of gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) on beta-adrenergic stimulated gastrin release by cultured rat antral mucosa and to assess the anatomical relationship between gastrin cells and GRP nerves in rat and human antrum. Peptide-containing cells were identified by application of an avidin-biotin-peroxidase immunocytochemical double staining method utilizing antibodies to GRP and gastrin prepared in rabbits. Rat antral mucosa was cultured for 60 min and gastrin released into the culture medium was measured by radioimmunoassay. Inclusion of antibodies to GRP in culture medium did not affect carbachol-stimulated gastrin release, whereas isoproterenol-stimulated gastrin release into the medium was inhibited significantly by addition of GRP antiserum to the culture medium. GRP-containing neurons and axonal fibers were stained immunocytochemically with diaminobenzidine (reddish-brown specific staining) and were located in the lamina propria adjacent to and surrounding the main lobules of antral glands. After double staining utilizing 4-Cl-1-Naphthol as substrate, blue stained gastrin-containing cells were identified in the middle and deeper regions of antral glands in close proximity to GRP neuronal elements. These studies suggest that beta-adrenergic, but not cholinergic, stimulation of gastrin release is mediated, at least in part, through GRP. They also demonstrate intimate anatomical, as well as functional, relationships between gastrin cells and GRP-containing neurons.  相似文献   

13.
Bombesin-induced gastrin release from extragastric sources has been investigated in two groups of patients without gastric antrum: 11 patients with total gastrectomy and 11 patients with subtotal (Billroth II) gastrectomy. A 30-min bombesin infusion (5 ng . kg-1 . min-1) caused a prompt significant gastrin increase (P less than 0.05) in both groups of patients. The gastrin response to bombesin was significantly (P less than 0.005) lower in patients without antral tissue than in the control group (n = 7). The individual peak gastrin responses, in totally (TG) and subtotally (SG) gastrectomized patients, were significantly over basal levels (TG: peak 100.3 +/- 12 vs. basal 62.8 +/- 9.1, P less than 0.005; SG: peak 96.9 +/- 9.4 vs. basal 72.4 +/- 6.8, P less than 0.001; pg/ml, mean +/- S.E.M.). These data indicate that bombesin acts not only on antral G cells, but on all gastrin cells in the gastrointestinal tract.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of bombesin on gastrin release and gastric acid secretion was investigated in 10 healthy volunteers. Bombesin (0.6 μg · Kg?1 · hr?1) produced a significantly higher (p< 0.001) increase in plasma gastrin levels (86.7 11.1 pmo/1 than after a protein meal (39.6 ± 5.6 pmol1/1). The gastric acid secretory response to bombesin (12.1 ± 2.9 mEq · hr?1) was however significantly lower (p< 0.005) than the maximal response produced by pentagostrin (20.9 ± 3.5 mEq · hr?1) at the dose of 6 μg · Kg?1. Atropine did not modify gastrin release induced by bombesin but significantly reduced gastric acid secretion (p< 0.01). From the data presented it may be hypothesized that less biologically active forms of gastrin and/or other peptides inhibiting the gastrin effect upon gastric acid secretion may be released by bombesin.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of secretin on acid and pepsin secretion and gastrin release in the totally isolated vascularly perfused rat stomach was studied. With the phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutyl methylxanthine (IMX) added to the vascular perfusate, baseline acid secretion was 4.7 +/- 1.1 (mean +/- S.E.M.) mumol/h and baseline pepsin output 1147 +/- 223 micrograms/h. Secretin significantly inhibited acid output to a minimum of 1.4 +/- 0.2 mumol/h at a concentration of 25 pM in the vascular perfusate (P less than 0.01). Pepsin output was not significantly different from baseline at any of the secretin doses tested. Threshold secretin concentration for acid inhibition was 5 pM. IMX stimulated gastrin output from 48 +/- 9 pM in the basal state to 95 +/- 13 pM after IMX (P less than 0.01). Secretin inhibited gastrin release only at the maximal dose of 625 pM, when gastrin concentration in the venous effluent decreased from 93 +/- 19 to 68 +/- 19 pM after secretin. Thus, in the totally isolated vascularly perfused rat stomach secretin in physiological concentrations inhibits acid secretion by a direct action on the acid secretory process and not via gastrin inhibition. The study also suggests that gastrin release at least in part is mediated via increased intracellular cAMP.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of bombesin (BBS) and gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) on gastric emptying was studied in conscious cats. This effect was measured simultaneously with antral motility. Acid and pepsin secretions as well as blood hormonal peptide release were additionally measured. A dual effect was observed. First, BBS and GRP slowed gastric emptying of liquids, while antral motility was decreased, then after 60 minutes of continuous intravenous infusion, antral motility returned to basal values and gastric emptying effect reversed. The mechanism of this peculiar action is independent of gastrin, pancreatic polypeptide, somatostatin and motilin release and most probably connected with a cholinergic stimulation induced by the peptides, the late predominance of which counterbalances the inhibitory effect of bombesin-like peptides on antral motility.  相似文献   

17.
Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Physiological stimuli from inside and outside the stomach coverage on gastric effector neurons that are the primary regulators of acid secretion. The effector neurons comprise cholinergic neurons and two types of non-cholinergic neurons: bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons. The neurons act directly on target cells or indirectly by regulating release of the hormone, gastrin, the stimulatory paracrine amine, histamine, and the inhibitory paracrine peptide, somatostatin. In the antrum, cholinergic and bombesin/GRP neurons activated by intraluminal proteins stimulate gastrin secretion directly and, in the case of cholinergic neurons, indirectly by eliminating the inhibitory influence of somatostatin (disinhibition). In turn, gastrin acts on adjacent somatostatin cells to restore the secretion of somatostatin. The dual paracrine circuit activated by antral neurons determines the magnitude of gastrin secretion. Low-level distention of the antrum activates, preferentially, VIP neurons that stimulate somatostatin secretion and thus inhibit gastrin secretion. Higher levels of distention activate predominantly cholinergic neurons that suppress antral somatostatin secretion and thus stimulate gastrin secretion. In the fundus, cholinergic neurons activated by distention or proteins stimulate acid secretion directly and indirectly by eliminating the inhibitory influence of somatostatin. The same stimuli activate bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons that stimulate somatostatin secretion and thus attenuate acid secretion. In addition, gastrin and fundic somatostatin influence acid secretion directly and indirectly by regulating histamine release. Acid in the lumen stimulates somatostatin secretion, which attenuates acid secretion in the fundus and gastrin secretion in the antrum.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of somatostatin-(1-14) (S1-14) on the gastrin- and histamine-induced acid secretion and gastrin-evoked vascular histamine release was studied in isolated vascularly perfused rat stomachs being continuously perfused by a gassed buffer containing 10% ovine erythrocytes and 50 microM isobutyl methylxanthine (IMX). Concentrations of gastrin (520 pM) and histamine, (0.5 microM) were chosen to give acid secretion in the same range (61.5 +/- 7.0 and 49.4 +/- 9.4 mumol/60 min). S1-14 induced a concentration-dependent decrease in acid secretion stimulated by both gastrin and histamine. Even at the lowest concentration examined (0.1 nM) somatostatin gave a significant inhibition of both gastrin- and histamine-stimulated acid secretion. The inhibitory effect was, however, most marked for gastrin-stimulated acid secretion (P less than 0.05 at 1 nM concentration of S1-14). Gastrin gave an immediate and marked vascular histamine release which was inhibited by somatostatin in the higher concentrations (1.0 and 5.0 nM). Somatostatin at the lowest concentration tested (0.1 nM) did not inhibit the gastrin-induced vascular histamine release although it did inhibit acid secretion. Furthermore, baseline histamine release was not affected by somatostatin. This study suggests that somatostatin inhibits acid secretion both via a direct effect of the parietal cell and by inhibiting gastrin-induced histamine release. Baseline histamine release is regulated by a mechanism not sensitive to somatostatin.  相似文献   

19.
1. The distribution of bombesin-like immunoreactivity was determined in the gastrointestinal tract of the primitive holostean fish, the bowfin (Amia calva) using immunocytochemistry.2. Immunostaining using two different antisera raised against frog skin bombesin revealed a population of apparent endocrine cells containing bombesin-like immunoreactivity in the epithelium of the antral mucosa in the stomach.3. No bombesin-containing endocrine cells were present in any other segment of the gut. Bombesinergic nerves were not observed anywhere in the bowfin gastrointestinal tract.4. The antral bombesin endocrine cells were of the open type and were distributed diffusely from the base to the tips of antral glands, with some tendency to cluster near the base of the glands.5. These results suggest that a bombesin-like peptide may play an endocrine role in control of gastric functions such as regulation of acid secretion and gastric motility. These results support the hypothesis that bombesin serves a role in bony fish analogous to the role of antral cholecystokinin in amphibia and antral gastrin in amniotes.  相似文献   

20.
The present studies were directed to examine the effects of beta-adrenergic and cholinergic stimulation on gastrin release and to assess the potential role of gastrin-releasing peptide in exerting these effects, utilizing incubated rat antral mucosa. Rat antral mucosa was incubated at 37 degrees C in Krebs-Henseleit bicarbonate buffer, pH 7.4, continuously gassed with 95% O2-5% CO2. After 1 h media were sampled for radioimmunoassay measurement of gastrin content. Inclusion of carbachol (2.5 X 10(-6) M) in culture medium increased medium gastrin concentration by 106 +/- 28% (P less than 0.01); addition of specific antibodies to gastrin-releasing peptide to the culture medium did not affect carbachol-stimulated gastrin release. Inclusion of isoproterenol (10(-9) M) in culture medium did not affect somatostatin release into the medium, but increased medium gastrin by 234 +/- 24% (P less than 0.001). However, in contrast to carbachol, addition of antibodies to gastrin-releasing peptide to culture medium decreased isoproterenol-stimulated gastrin release by 67 +/- 9% (P less than 0.001). Results of these studies indicate that, under the conditions of these experiments, beta-adrenergic, but not muscarinic, stimulation of gastrin release may be mediated, at least in part, through gastrin-releasing peptide.  相似文献   

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