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1.
Pancreatic secretion in rats is regulated by feedback inhibition of cholecystokinin (CCK) release by proteases in the gut lumen, but little is known about the role of gastric acid in this regulation. This study, carried out on conscious rats with large gastric fistulas (GF) and pancreatic fistulas, shows that diversion of pancreatic juice results in the progressive stimulation of pancreatic secretion only in rats with the GF closed. When the GF was kept open, the diversion resulted in only small increment in pancreatic secretion and this was accompanied by progressive increase in gastric acid outputs. Similar amounts of HCl instilled into the duodenum in rats with the GF open fully reproduced the increase in pancreatic secretion observed after the diversion of pancreatic juice. Pretreatment with omeprazole (15 mumol/kg) to suppress gastric acid secretion or with L-364,718 (5 mumol/kg) to antagonize CCK receptors in the diverted state, resulted in the decline in pancreatic secretion similar to that observed after opening the GF. CCK given s.c. (20-320 pmol/kg) failed to cause any significant rise in the post-diversion pancreatic secretion in rats with the GF closed, but stimulated this secretion dose-dependently when the GF was open. Camostate (6-200 mg/kg) in rats with pancreatic juice returned to the duodenum caused dose-dependent increase in pancreatic secretion, but after opening the GF or after omeprazole this increase was reduced by about 75%. This study provides evidence that gastric acid plays a crucial role in the pancreatic response to diversion of pancreatic juice or inhibition of luminal proteases, and that factors that eliminate gastric acid secretion reduce this response.  相似文献   

2.
This study was designed to determine the role of cholecystokinin (CCK) in the inhibition of gastric HCl secretion by duodenal peptone, fat and acid in dogs with chronic gastric and pancreatic fistulas. Intraduodenal instillation of 5% peptone stimulated both gastric HCl secretion and pancreatic protein secretion and caused significant increments in plasma gastrin and CCK levels. L-364,718, a selective antagonist of CCK-A receptors, caused further increase in gastric HCl and plasma gastrin responses to duodenal peptone but reduced the pancreatic protein outputs in these tests by about 75%. L-365,260, an antagonist of type B receptors, reduced gastric acid by about 25% but failed to influence pancreatic response to duodenal peptone. Addition of 10% oleate or acidification of peptone to pH 3.0 profoundly inhibited acid secretion while significantly increasing the pancreatic protein secretion and plasma CCK levels. Administration of L-364,718 reversed the fall in gastric HCl secretion and significantly attenuated pancreatic protein secretion in tests with both peptone plus oleate and peptone plus acid. Exogenous CCK infused i.v. in a dose (25 pmol/kg per h) that raised plasma CCK to the level similar to that achieved by peptone meal plus fat resulted in similar inhibition of gastric acid response to that attained with fat and this effect was completely abolished by the pretreatment with L-364,718. We conclude that CCK released by intestinal peptone meal, containing fat or acid, exerts a tonic inhibitory influence on gastric acid secretion and gastrin release through the CCK-A receptors.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of luminal ghrelin on pancreatic enzyme secretion in the rat   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ghrelin, a 28-amino-acid peptide produced predominantly by oxyntic mucosa has been reported to affect the pancreatic exocrine function but the mechanism of its secretory action is not clear. The effects of intraduodenal (i.d.) infusion of ghrelin on pancreatic amylase outputs under basal conditions and following the stimulation of pancreatic secretion with diversion of pancreato-biliary juice (DPBJ) as well as the role of vagal nerve, sensory fibers and CCK in this process were determined. Ghrelin given into the duodenum of healthy rats at doses of 1.0 or 10.0 microg/kg increased pancreatic amylase outputs under basal conditions or following the stimulation of pancreatic secretion with DPBJ. Bilateral vagotomy as well as capsaicin deactivation of sensory fibers completely abolished all stimulatory effects of luminal ghrelin on pancreatic exocrine function. Pretreatment with lorglumide, a CCK(1) receptor blocker, reversed the stimulation of amylase release produced by intraduodenal application of ghrelin. Intraduodenal ghrelin at doses of 1.0 or 10.0 microg/kg increased plasma concentrations of CCK and ghrelin. In conclusion, ghrelin given into the duodenum stimulates pancreatic enzyme secretion. Activation of vagal reflexes and CCK release as well as central mechanisms could be implicated in the stimulatory effect of luminal ghrelin on the pancreatic exocrine functions.  相似文献   

4.
5.
CCK exhibits a potent cytoprotective activity against acute gastric lesions, but its role in ulcer healing has been little examined. In this study we determined whether exogenous CCK or endogenously released CCK by camostate, an inhibitor of luminal proteases, or by the diversion of pancreatico-biliary secretion from the duodenum, could affect ulcer healing. In addition, the effects of antagonism of CCK-A receptors (by loxiglumide, LOX) or CCK-B receptors (by L-365,260), an inhibition of NO-synthase by N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA), or sensory denervation by large neurotoxic dose of capsaicin on CCK-induced ulcer healing were examined. Gastric ulcers were produced by serosal application of acetic acid and animals were sacrificed 9 days after ulcer induction. The area of ulcers and blood flow at the ulcer area were determined. Plasma levels of gastrin and CCK and luminal somatostatin were measured by RIA and mucosal biopsy samples were taken for histological evaluation and measurement of DNA synthesis. CCK given s.c. reduced dose dependently the ulcer area; the threshold dose of CCK being 1 nmol/kg and the dose inhibiting this area by 50% being 5 nmol/kg. This healing effect of CCK was accompanied by a significant increase in the GBF at ulcer margin and the rise in luminal NO production, plasma gastrin level and DNA synthesis. Concurrent treatment with LOX, completely abolished the CCK-8-induced acceleration of the ulcer healing and the rise in the GBF at the ulcer margin, whereas L-365,260 remained without any influence. Treatment with camostate or diversion of pancreatic juice that raised plasma CCK level to that observed with administration of CCK-8, also accelerated ulcer healing and this effect was also attenuated by LOX but not by L-365,260. Inhibition of NO-synthase by L-NNA significantly delayed ulcer healing and reversed the CCK-8 induced acceleration of ulcer healing, hyperemia at the ulcer margin and luminal NO release, and these effects were restored by the addition to L-NNA of L-arginine but not D-arginine. Capsaicin denervation attenuated CCK-induced ulcer healing, and the accompanying rise in the GBF at the ulcer margin and decreased plasma gastrin and luminal release of somatostatin when compared to those in rats with intact sensory nerves. Detectable signals for CCK-A and B receptor mRNAs as well as for cNOS mRNA expression were recorded by RT-PCR in the vehicle control gastric mucosa. The expression of CCK-A receptor mRNA and cNOS mRNA was significantly increased in rats treated with CCK-8 and camostate, whereas CCK-B receptor mRNA remained unaffected. We conclude that CCK accelerates ulcer healing by the mechanism involving upregulation of specific CCK-A receptors, enhancement of somatostatin release, stimulation of sensory nerves and hyperemia in the ulcer area, possibly mediated by NO.  相似文献   

6.
Cannulas were implanted to collect bile and pancreatic juice, and the collected secretions were pumped back into the intestine at the level of the duodenum or the proximal ileum. The effect of 6 days of such treatment on pancreatic secretion and on pancreatic growth was determined. The effect on pancreatic secretion was studied by measuring the pancreatic secretory response to a stimulus, provided by acute diversion of bile-pancreatic juice from the proximal intestine. Trophic effects were studied in a separate group of rats by measuring pancreatic weight, protein content, and chymotrypsin activity after an overnight fast. Stimulated pancreatic secretion was 2.1 times greater for protein output and 3.4 times greater for fluid output in rats with chronic diversion of bile-pancreatic juice to the ileum. Pancreatic weight, protein content, and chymotrypsin activity were increased 2.6, 2.9, and 4.8 times, respectively, by chronic diversion of bile-pancreatic juice to the ileum. These results indicate that pancreatic hypertrophy and hyperplasia reported in rats with bile-pancreatic duct transposition to the ileum are the result of loss of feed-back inhibition from bile-pancreatic juice in the proximal intestine.  相似文献   

7.
Pancreatic exocrine secretion in the conscious rat is regulated by proteases secreted by the pancreas, and cholecystokinin (CCK) is known to be involved in its mechanism. It has also been reported that the absence of either pancreatic juice or bile in the duodenum could stimulate pancreatic secretion. Therefore, differences in CCK release responding to the exclusion of bile, pancreatic juice (PJ), or both bile and pancreatic juice (BPJ) from the intestine were examined by using a bioassay for cholecystokinin. Plasma CCK levels were increased by all three treatments compared with the basal value, the order of their effects being BPJ greater than PJ greater than bile diversion, and CCK concentrations produced by BPJ diversion were much greater than can be explained as simply summed effect of exclusions of bile and PJ. Pancreatic exocrine secretions were significantly increased by PJ and BPJ diversions, but the effect of bile diversion on the pancreas was not statistically significant. An additional infusion of CR-1409 (0.1 mg/rat), one of CCK receptor antagonists, inhibited exocrine function stimulated by BPJ diversion. We conclude (i) BPJ diversion is the strongest endogenous stimulant on CCK release; (ii) the potentiation between bile and PJ diversions is induced on CCK release; (iii) pancreatic protein secretion during BPJ diversion is mainly modulated by CCK.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of gastrin, cholecystokinin (CCK) and bombesin on the DNA synthesis, as a biochemical indicator of trophic action in the gastroduodenal mucosa and the pancreas have been examined in rats fasted for 48 h and in rats refed for 16 h with or without administration of specific receptor antagonists for bombesin, gastrin and CCK. Bombesin and gastrin administered three times daily for 48 h in fasted rats significantly increased the rate of DNA synthesis as measured by the incorporation of [3H] thymidine into DNA in each tissue tested. CCK significantly increased DNA synthesis in the duodenal mucosa and pancreatic tissue, but not in the gastric mucosa. The stimulation of DNA synthesis induced by bombesin in the gastroduodenal mucosa and pancreas was abolished by bombesin/GRP receptor antagonist, RC-3095. RC-3095 did not affect DNA synthesis stimulated by gastrin and CCK in these tissues. L-365,260, a receptor antagonist for gastrin suppressed the DNA synthesis induced by gastrin but not by CCK or bombesin in the gastrointestinal mucosa and pancreas. L-364,718 a specific antagonist for CCK receptors was effective only against CCK stimulated duodenal mucosa and pancreatic growth. Refeeding of 48 h fasting rats strongly enhanced the DNA synthesis in all tissues tested, and this effect was significantly reduced in the gastroduodenal mucosa by blocking only gastrin receptors (with L-365,260) and that in the duodenal mucosa and the pancreas by antagonizing of CCK receptors (with L-364,718). Antagonism of bombesin receptors (with RC-3095) did not significantly affect the stimulation of DNA synthesis induced by refeeding in all tissues tested. This study indicates that the stimulation of DNA synthesis can be achieved by exogenous gastrin, CCK and bombesin acting through separate receptor but that only gastrin and CCK play the major role in the postprandial stimulation of the growth of gastroduodenal mucosa and pancreatic tissue.  相似文献   

9.
Effects of neural blockages on pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to infusing fatty acid into the lumen were investigated using anesthetized rats, equipped with bile-pancreatic and duodenal cannulae, to evaluate the relative contribution of the neural and the hormonal mediations in the pancreatic response. Oleate (0.2 ml) was injected as a bolus into the rat duodenum, and the trypsin output in bile-pancreatic juice was monitored to determine the pancreatic enzyme secretion response with continuous return of bile-pancreatic juice to the intestine. When anticholinergic agents such as atropine sulfate and scopolamine were administrated, although basal level in pancreatic enzyme secretion fell, the increase of pancreatic enzyme secretion from basal level after stimulation by oleate was not significantly different from that of the control (no blockage). However, the ganglion blocker, hexamethonium, inhibited the pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to oleate by 94%. An adrenergic blocker, guanethidine, also led to as much of a decrease as the ganglion blocker-induced decrease. Adrenergic alpha- and beta-blockers partially, but not completely, inhibited the enzyme secretion. Adrenergic blockage also suppressed the basal level in pancreatic enzyme secretion. On the other hand, a specific CCK antagonist, proglumide, significantly inhibited pancreatic enzyme secretion induced by oleate in the presence of scopolamine. These observations suggest that pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to oleate is primarily mediated by CCK and that adrenergic modulation may play an important role in the CCK-mediated pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to oleate, although interpretation of these results may have some restriction related to anesthesia.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of gastrin, cholecystokinin (CCK) and bombesin on the DNA synthesis, as a biochemical indicator of trophic action in the gastroduodenal mucosa and the pancreas, have been examined in rats fasted for 48 h and in rats refed for 16 h with or without administration of specific receptor antagonists for bombesin, gastrin and CCK. Bombesin and gastrin administered three times daily for 48 h in fasted rats significantly increased the rate of DNA synthesis as measured by the incorporation of [3H] thymidine into DNA in each tissue tested. CCK significantly increased DNA synthesis in the duodenal mucosa and pancreatic tissue, but not in the gastric mucosa. The stimulation of DNA synthesis induced by bombesin in the gastroduodenal mucosa and pancreas was abolished by bombesin/GRP receptor antagonist, RC-3095. RC-3095 did not affect DNA synthesis stimulated by gastrin and CCK in these tissues. L-365,260, a receptor antagonist for gastrin suppressed the DNA synthesis induced by gastrin but not by CCK or bombesin in the gastrointestinal mucosa and pancreas. L-364,718, a specific antagonist for CCK receptors was effective only against CCK stimulated duodenal mucosa and pancreatic growth. Refeeding of 48 h fasting rats strongly enhanced the DNA synthesis in all tissues tested, and this effect was significantly reduced in the gastroduodenal mucosa by blocking only gastrin receptors (with L-365, 260) and that in the duodenal mucosa and the pancreas by antagonizing of CCK receptors (with L-364,718). Antagonism of bombesin receptors (with RC-3095) did not significantly affect the stimulation of DNA synthesis induced by refeeding in all tissues tested. This study indicates that the stimulation of DNA synthesis can be achieved by exogenous gastrin, CCK and bombesin acting through separate receptors, but that only gastrin and CCK play the major role in the postprandial stimulation of the growth of gastroduodenal mucosa and pancreatic tissue.  相似文献   

11.
The regulatory response of the exocrine pancreas was examined in rats under unanesthetized and unrestrained conditions. The previous study demonstrated that the pancreatic protease secretion increased 2-fold after spontaneous feeding of a low protein diet in chronically bile-pancreatic cannulated rats (normal rats) whose bile-pancreatic juice (BPJ) was returned to the duodenum. In the present study, we observed the response of the exocrine pancreatic secretion to spontaneous feeding of a low protein diet in rats with chronic diversion of BPJ from the proximal small intestine for 6 days (bypass rat) whose diverted BPJ was returned to the upper ileum. During BPJ diversion, the dry weight and the protein content of the pancreas were increased 2-fold, compared with normal rats. Also, the levels of trypsinogen and chymotrypsinogen in the pancreas were increased several times, but amylase was decreased. The basal secretion of enzymes after a 24-hr fast was enhanced in bypass rats in proportion to the pancreatic enzyme contents. After spontaneous feeding of 8% casein fat-free diet, the increases in the pancreatic secretion of bypass rats were much smaller than those of normal rats. In contrast, the increase of BPJ flow of bypass rats after feeding was greater than that of normal rats. These findings represent that the chronic diversion of BPJ exerts hypergrowth of pancreas and hypersecretion of proteases in the fasting state, and less sensitivity of pancreatic enzyme secretion to dietary feeding.  相似文献   

12.
We had demonstrated that a peptic hydrolysate of guanidinated casein that is made from casein by the conversion of lysine to homoarginine stimulated pancreatic exocrine secretion in rats with chronic bile-pancreatic juice (BPJ) diversion from the proximal small intestine. This modified protein also stimulated cholecystokinin (CCK) release from dispersed rat intestinal cells. In this study, we found that guanidinated casein hydrolysate stimulates CCK release in chronic BPJ-diverted rats with cholinergic control blocked by atropine. Intraduodenal guanidinated casein hydrolysate increased portal plasma CCK concentration and pancreatic secretion in atropine-treated BPJ-diverted rats. In contrast, the portal plasma CCK concentration was not increased by intact casein hydrolysate. We conclude that guanidinated casein hydrolysate directly stimulates CCK release from the intestine via some cholinergic-independent mechanism, and an increase of the pancreatic exocrine secretion is regulated by CCK released by guanidinated casein hydrolysate. A guanidyl residue is likely to be involved in this control.  相似文献   

13.
Little is known about the changes in pancreatic enzyme storage in acute pancreatitis. We have performed flow cytometric studies of zymogen granules from rats with acute pancreatitis induced by hyperstimulation with caerulein. A comparison was made with rats treated with hydrocortisone (10 mg/kg/day) over 7 days before inducing pancreatitis in order to find out whether the amount of enzymes stored in the pancreas plays a key role in the development of pancreatitis. The potentially therapeutic effect of L-364,718 (0.1 mg/kg/day, for 7 days), a CCK receptor antagonist, was assayed in the rats with caerulein-induced pancreatitis which had previously received the hydrocortisone treatment. A significant increase in the intragranular enzyme content was observed 5 h after hyperstimulation with caerulein. The highest values were reached in the rats previously treated with hydrocortisone. The greatest pancreatic enzyme load was parallel to the highest values in plasma amylase, edema and haematocrit observed. Acute pancreatitis was reversed seven days later. At this stage smaller granules appeared in the pancreas whose enzyme content was similar to that of controls when no treatment was applied after pancreatitis. In contrast, L-364,718 administration prevented the favourable evolution of pancreatitis since the antagonism exerted on CCK receptors induced a blockade of secretion of the large amounts of enzymes stored in the pancreas. Moreover, the enzyme content in zymogen granules was below normal values since the stimulatory CCK action on enzyme synthesis can be inhibited by L-364,718. Our results suggest that the efficiency of CCK antagonists, as potential therapy, would also depend on the load of enzymes in the pancreas when acute pancreatitis is produced.  相似文献   

14.
The rat plasma cholecystokinin (CCK) concentration was measured after intestinal administration of a peptide purified from rat bile-pancreatic juice, which has a stimulatory effect on pancreatic enzyme secretion. The plasma CCK concentration was measured by means of a radioimmunoassay using CCK-8 N-terminal specific antibody, OAL-656. In experimental rats with protease-free intestines, intraduodenal infusion of 10 micrograms of the purified peptide, which stimulates pancreatic enzyme secretion 2.0-2.5 fold, induced a significant increase in the plasma CCK level. Furthermore, after removal of CCK from the plasma by immunoabsorption with an OAL-656-bound Sepharose 4B column, the stimulatory effect of the plasma on pancreatic enzyme secretion was abolished when it was injected intravenously into recipient rats. It was concluded that this peptide stimulates the release of CCK in the intestine and that this is responsible at least in part for the pancreatic enzyme secretion-stimulating activity of the peptide.  相似文献   

15.
Neurotensin (NT) stimulates pancreatic exocrine secretion in dogs and humans. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of exogenous neurotensin on pancreatic exocrine secretion in rats. Five Sprague-Dawley male rats were prepared with pancreatic, gastric and duodenal fistulas. Bile was shunted into the duodenum in order to collect pure pancreatic juice. 24 h later, neurotensin (0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 1.0 nmol/kg) was infused intravenously in a random fashion. Pancreatic juice was collected every 10 min, and the volume was recorded and protein and bicarbonate were measured. Neurotensin stimulated, in a dose-related manner, the pancreatic secretion of water, protein and bicarbonate. Neurotensin may be involved in the physiologic control of pancreatic secretion in rats.  相似文献   

16.
We examined the role of CCK in bombesin-induced pancreatic growth in rats using the CCK receptor antagonist L-364,718. Rats (155 +/- 1 g, 8-10 per group) received subcutaneous injections every 8 h for 5 days with bombesin (0.6, 1.7 and 5 nmol/kg) or bombesin in combination with L-364,718 (1 mg/kg). After 5 days the pancreas was removed and pancreatic weight, protein content, DNA, amylase and chymotrypsin contents were determined. Bombesin produced a significant increase (48-475%) of pancreatic weight, tissue contents of protein, DNA, amylase and chymotrypsinogen (F = 82, P less than 0.001). When a large dose of bombesin (5 nmol/kg) was combined with L-364,718 a significant inhibition (up to 70%) of all tissue parameters was observed (P less than 0.001). L-364,718 did not affect the growth response to a small dose of bombesin (0.6 nmol/kg). Plasma CCK levels 15 min after a single injection of bombesin (0.6, 1.7 and 5 nmol/kg) were significantly increased in response to the 5 nmol/kg dose (2.0 +/- 0.7 to 3.4 +/- 0.8 pM, F = 6.9, P less than 0.01). No increases of CCK plasma levels were found in response to the 0.6 and 1.7 nmol/kg doses of bombesin, corresponding to the lack of effects of L-364,718 on growth parameters at these doses. Measuring the time-course of CCK plasma levels after a single injection of 5 nmol/kg bombesin revealed an increase from basal values of 1.4 +/- 0.3 pM to maximal levels of 3.5 +/- 0.5 pM after 15 min (F = 7.1, P less than 0.001). Values returned to basal after 60 min. These results suggest that low doses of bombesin act directly at the acinar cell or through release of non-CCK growth factors whereas high doses of bombesin act in part through CCK release.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of intravenous parathyroid hormone (PTH) on steady state Secretin-induced pancreatic secretion were studied in seven dogs before and after parathyroidectomy. Free flow of pancreatic juice was obtained by direct cannulation of the main pancreatic duct (the minor duct being ligated) : a gastric fistula prevented the entry of gastric acid into the duodenum. In the normal dog PTH caused a significant increase in volume and bicarbonate concentration, reciprocal change in chloride and no change in total protein concentration. The stimulatory effect of PTH was dose-dependent. In the parathyroidectomized dog, the basic Secretin-induced secretion was lower than the preoperative values, but PTH infusion caused a significant increase in volume of fluids and bicarbonate concentration, reciprocal change in chloride and no change in protein concentration. These results were not dependent on calcium blood level, and did not change after calcium injection to the hypocalcemic parathyroidectomized dog. It is suggested, that PTH may have a direct effect on pancreatic exocrine secretion.  相似文献   

18.
The present status of our understanding of the feedback regulation of pancreatic secretion by peptide YY (PYY) released from the distal intestine is reviewed. Exocrine pancreatic secretion is primarily controlled by the cephalic (the vagus nerve), gastric (acid and pepsin secretion, and nutrients delivered into the duodenum by gastric emptying), and intestinal (secretin and CCK) mechanisms. PYY acts on the multiple sites in the brain and gut, and inhibits pancreatic secretion by regulating these primary control mechanisms. The involvement of Y(1) and Y(2) receptors has been suggested in the regulation of pancreatic secretion. However, it remains to be studied which site of action or receptor subtype is physiologically most important for this regulation.  相似文献   

19.
Recent synthesis of specific, potent bombesin receptor antagonists allows examination of the role of bombesin-like peptides in physiological processes in vivo. We characterized effects of [D-Phe6]bombesin(6-13)-methyl-ester (BME) on pancreatic enzyme secretion stimulated by the C-terminal decapeptide of gastrin releasing peptide (GRP-10), food intake, and diversion of bile-pancreatic juice in rats. In isolated pancreatic acini, BME had no agonistic effects on amylase secretion but competitively inhibited responses to GRP-10, yielding a pA2 value of 8.89 +/- 0.19. In conscious rats with gastric, jugular vein, bile-pancreatic, and duodenal cannulas, basal enzyme secretion (bile-pancreatic juice recirculated) was not affected by the antagonist. Maximal amylase response to GRP-10 (0.5 nmol/kg/h) was inhibited dose dependently by BME, reaching 97% inhibition at a dose of 400 nmol/kg/h. The dose response curve of amylase secretion stimulated by GRP-10 was shifted to the right by 40 nmol/kg/h BME, but maximal amylase response was unaltered, suggesting competitive inhibition in vivo. Liquid food intake and bile-pancreatic juice diversion caused substantial increases in amylase secretion; neither response was altered during administration of 400 pmol/kg/h BME. These results demonstrate that BME is a potent, competitive antagonist of pancreatic responses to bombesin-like peptides in vitro and in vivo. Lack of effect of BME on basal pancreatic secretion or responses to liquid food intake or diversion of bile-pancreatic juice in rats suggests that endogenous bombesin-like peptides do not act either directly or indirectly to mediate these responses.  相似文献   

20.
We have previously reported that pancreatic polypeptide (PP) overexpressing mice display thin phenotype with delayed gastric emptying and decreased food intake. In the present study, we further examined if CCK contributes to anorexia and anxiety behavior in PP overexpressing mice. Plasma CCK levels in PP overexpressing mice and their littermates were determined by radioimmunoassay using antisera specific to sulfated CCK-8 and CCK-33. To elucidate the role of CCK in PP overexpressing mice, CCK-1 receptor antagonist (L-364,718) or saline was administered intraperitoneally and food intake was measured for 2 h. CCK-2 antagonist (L-365,260) or saline was injected intraperitoneally and the elevated plus-maze test was performed to assess anxiety. Plasma CCK levels were significantly increased in PP overexpressing mice. Administration of L-364,718 increased food intake in PP overexpressing mice compared to the saline-injected PP overexpressing group, while L-364,718 did not increase food intake in non-transgenic littermates. PP overexpressing mice exhibited anxiety in the plus-maze test. Administration of CCK-2 receptor antagonist (L-365,260) reversed the decreased percentage of entry into the open arms in PP overexpressing mice. These results indicated that elevated CCK may contribute to anorexic and anxious phenotype of PP overexpressing mice.  相似文献   

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