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1.
The effects of 1-h infusions of bombesin and gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) at 50 pmol/kg per h and neurotensin at 100 pmol/kg per h on gastrin, pancreatic polypeptide (PP) and neurotensin release in man were determined following either saline or atropine infusion (20 micrograms/kg). Bombesin produced a rise in plasma neurotensin from 32 +/- 6 to 61 +/- 19 pmol/l and of PP from 26 +/- 8 to 36 +/- 7 pmol/l. There was a further rise of plasma PP to 50 +/- 13 pmol/l after cessation of the infusion. GRP had no significant effect on plasma neurotensin, but compared to bombesin, produced a significantly greater rise in plasma PP from 34 +/- 6 to 66 +/- 19 pmol/l during infusion. There was no post-infusional increase. At this dose, GRP was as effective as bombesin in releasing gastrin, although unlike bombesin its effect was enhanced by atropine. Neurotensin produced a rise in plasma PP from 17 +/- 4 to 38 +/- 8 pmol/l. Atropine blocked the release of PP during GRP and neurotensin infusion. Atropine had no effect on neurotensin or PP release during bombesin infusion, but did block the rise in plasma PP following bombesin infusion. We conclude that, in contrast to meal-stimulated neurotensin release, bombesin-stimulated neurotensin release is cholinergic independent. Despite structural homology, bombesin and GRP at the dose used are dissimilar in man in their actions and sensitivity to cholinergic blockade.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
Bombesin, acetylcholine, prostaglandins and somatostatin are all thought to be involved in the regulation of gastrin release and gastric secretion. We have studied the effects of low doses of atropine, 16-16(Me)2-prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and somatostatin-14 on bombesin-stimulated gastrin release and gastric acid and pepsin secretion in conscious fistula dogs. For reference, synthetic gastrin G-17 was studied with and without somatostatin. Bombesin, in a dose-related manner, increased serum gastrin, which in turn stimulated gastric acid and pepsin secretion in a serum gastrin, concentration-dependent manner. Somatostatin inhibited gastrin release by bombesin as well as the secretory stimulation by G-17; the combination of sequential effects resulted in a marked inhibition of bombesin-stimulated gastric acid and pepsin secretion. PGE2 also strongly inhibited gastrin release and acid and pepsin secretion. Atropine had no significant effect on gastrin release, but greatly inhibited gastric secretion. Thus somatostatin and PGE2 inhibited at two sites, gastrin release and gastrin effects, while atropine affected only the latter.  相似文献   

5.
Human gastrin-releasing peptide: biological potency in humans.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) was infused in graded doses (1-27 pmol/kg per h) to healthy human volunteers to study the effects on gastric, pancreatic and gallbladder functions as well as on gastrin, CCK and PP release. The results were compared to equimolar doses of synthetic bombesin. GRP significantly (P less than 0.05) stimulated gastric and pancreatic secretory responses, gallbladder contraction and gastro-enteropancreatic hormone release in a dose-dependent manner. GRP was found to be equipotent to bombesin with respect to gastric acid secretion, pancreatic enzyme output, gallbladder contraction and plasma hormone release. We conclude (a) that human GRP has similar biologic effects as synthetic bombesin; (b) as GRP is localized exclusively in nerve tissue and has potent effects on different organs, it is a likely candidate for peptidergic control of human gastric, pancreatic and gallbladder functions.  相似文献   

6.
It is well established that duodenal acidification strongly inhibits gastric acid secretion, gastric emptying rate and gastrin release. These effects are at least partly mediated via hormonal pathways, but it is not known whether they are mediated by the release of one peptide named in the past enterogastrone, or by several peptides acting together. The effects of duodenal acidification on gastric acid secretion and gastrin release can be reproduced by infusion of small doses of secretin and plasma secretin levels increase during duodenal acidification or after a meal. This peptide is thus the most probable candidate as an enterogastrone. It has however never been clearly shown that administration of low doses of secretin do decrease gastric emptying rate as well as acid secretion. Experiments were performed on four dogs with gastric fistulas. A peptone solution was infused into the stomach. The experiments were repeated during infusion of synthetic secretin. Our results indicate that infusion of low doses of secretin reproduce all the effects of duodenal acidification: a significant inhibition of gastric acid secretion, gastrin release and gastric emptying rate.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of intravenously administered calcitonin and secretin on bombesin-stimulated serum gastrin and gastric acid secretion was studied in 7 volunteers. Secretin G.I.H. (1 C.U./kg per h) and calcitonin (0.5 I.U./kg per h) significantly (P < 0.05) inhibited the serum gastrin and gastric acid responses to bombesin-14 (90 pmol/kg per h). Inhibition of gastrin release could not fully account for the inhibition of gastric acid secretion.  相似文献   

8.
After a meal the serum concentrations of the N-terminal tridecapeptide-like fragment of gastrin-17, (1-13)G-17, increased markedly in patients with active duodenal ulcer, but less so in healthy subjects. Consequently the synthetic (1-13)G-17 was infused intravenously in doses that resulted in concentrations similar to those measured in duodenal ulcer patients in order to examine whether the N-terminal fragment influences gastric acid secretion. Doses of 125 and 400 pmol (1-13)G-17/kg per h inhibited the meal-stimulated acid secretion by 36% (P less than 0.05) and 66% (P less than 0.05) respectively. The release of endogenous C-terminal gastrin immunoreactivity was not influenced. The infusion of (1-13)G-17 also inhibited the acid response to exogenous gastrin-34, gastrin-17 and Peptavlon, but not to gastrin-4. The results suggest that the N-terminal gastrin-17 fragment--although devoid of the hitherto considered only active site of gastrin--plays a significant role in the regulation of the gastric acid secretion in patients with active duodenal ulcer.  相似文献   

9.
The influence of intragastric pH on the basal release of somatostatin has been studied in healthy controls and in duodenal ulcer patients. In addition the somatostatin response to gastrin-releasing peptide infusion has been evaluated both regarding the effect of intragastric pH and the influence of vagal innervation and muscarinic blockade. No difference was found in basal blood levels, when changing the intraluminal pH, although a slightly higher basal somatostatin concentration was noticed in patients with duodenal ulcer disease. Neither proximal gastric vagotomy nor cholinergic blockade had any effect on basal somatostatin concentrations. GRP infused in stepwise increasing doses from 20 pmol/kg/h to 400 pmol/kg/h induced a small but significant response. This effect of GRP was most evident, when the stomach was perfused with 0.1 M HCl. The small, somatostatin response to GRP infusion was not influenced by vagal denervation of the parietal cell area, neither by cholinergic blockade. Despite the previously observed effects of vagotomy and cholinergic blockade on gastrin release induced by GRP, a corresponding inverse effect on somatostatin is not apparent.  相似文献   

10.
Rat stomach ECL cells are rich in histamine and chromogranin A-derived peptides, such as pancreastatin. Gastrin causes the parietal cells to secrete acid by flooding them with histamine from the ECL cells. In the past, gastric histamine release has been studied using anaesthetized, surgically manipulated animals or isolated gastric mucosa, glands or ECL cells. We monitored gastric histamine mobilization in intact conscious rats by subjecting them to gastric submucosal microdialysis. A microdialysis probe was implanted into the submucosa of the acid-producing part of the stomach (day 1). The rats had access to food and water or were deprived of food (48 h), starting on day 2 after implantation of the probe. On day 4, the rats received food or gastrin (intravenous infusion), and sampling of microdialysate commenced. Samples (flow rate 1.2 microl min(-1)) were collected every 20 or 60 min, and the histamine and pancreastatin concentrations were determined. The serum gastrin concentration was determined in tail vein blood. Exogenous gastrin (4-h infusion) raised microdialysate histamine and pancreastatin dose-dependently. This effect was prevented by gastrin receptor blockade (YM022). Depletion of ECL-cell histamine by alpha-fluoromethylhistidine, an irreversible inhibitor of the histamine-forming enzyme, suppressed the gastrin-evoked release of histamine but not that of pancreastatin. Fasting lowered serum gastrin and microdialysate histamine by 50%, while refeeding raised serum gastrin and microdialysate histamine and pancreastatin 3-fold. We conclude that histamine mobilized by gastrin and food intake derives from ECL cells because: 1) Histamine and pancreastatin were released concomitantly, 2) histamine mobilization following gastrin or food intake was prevented by gastrin receptor blockade, and 3) mobilization of histamine (but not pancreastatin) was abolished by alpha-fluoromethylhistidine. Hence, gastric submucosal microdialysis allows us to monitor the mobilization of ECL-cell histamine in intact conscious rats under various experimental conditions not previously accessible to study. While gastrin receptor blockade lowered post-prandial release of ECL-cell histamine by about 80%, unilateral vagotomy reduced post-prandial mobilization of ECL-cell histamine by about 50%. Hence, both gastrin and vagal excitation contribute to the post-prandial release of ECL-cell histamine.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Results of several experiments have suggested that histamine-2 receptors play an inhibitory role in regulating gastrin release. We evaluated this prospectively in healthy human beings by infusing intravenously either histamine (0.33 μg/kg/min) or cimetidine (3.33 mg/min) during a continuous 3-h intragastric infusion of a 3% mixed amino acid meal, a potent stimulus of gastrin release. In order to be certain that effects of histamine or cimetidine on gastrin release were independent of their known effects on gastric acid secretion, intragastric pH was maintained at 5.0 by in vivo intragastric titration with sodium bicarbonate or hydrochloric acid. Although histamine and cimetidine had significant effects on gastric acid secretion, neither significantly affected the rises in serum gastrin concentrations during intragastric amino acid infusion. For example, mean gastrin rises above basal concentrations were 39 ± 9 pg/ml on the control day, 39 ± 9 pg/ml on the histamine day and 44 ± 11 pg/ml on the cimetidine day (P > 0.05). Thus, blockade or stimulation of H2-receptors at the doses tested had no effect on gastrin release in response to an amino acid meal in humans when intragastric pH was maintained at 5.0.  相似文献   

13.
Bombesin stimulates growth of the stomach and pancreas in adult rats. Part of this effect is thought to be through the release of CCK following bombesin treatment. We studied the effect of long term administration of bombesin on the pancreas and stomach in suckling rats and examined the action of bombesin using specific CCK antagonist (CR-1409) and bombesin antagonists (GRP19-26, D-Phe19, Leu26CH2NHCOCH3 = cpd 17; L-686,095-001C002 = cpd 23). Rat pups (7-days-old) were given bombesin (20 micrograms/kg body wt. twice a day) or vehicle (1% gelatin) for 9 days. Bombesin stimulated pancreatic and gastric growth (tissue weight, total protein and DNA content all increased). Pancreatic trypsinogen concentration and content showed a 2-3-fold increase. CR-1409 at 6 mg/kg body wt., a dose that blocked the trophic action of CCK-33 when given to pups at similar ages, did not affect the bombesin-stimulated growth of the pancreas or the increase in trypsinogen level. At 2.4 mg/kg body wt., cpd 17 partially blocked and cpd 23 completely blocked the trophic effect of bombesin on the pancreas and stomach and the increase in trypsinogen level in the pancreas. RU-486, a type II glucocorticoid receptor antagonist, given at a dose sufficient to block the physiological action of glucocorticoid, had no effect on bombesin-stimulated growth of the pancreas. Thus, in vivo, bombesin acts directly on the neonatal pancreas and stomach.  相似文献   

14.
It has been shown previously that trypsinogen and its activation peptide but not trypsin decreased gastric secretion. The purpose of this work was to study the dose-action relation between the intraduodenal infusion of trypsinogen and gastric secretion. Three dogs provided with gastric and duodenal Thomas fistulae were stimulated by continuous i.v. perfusion of porcine gastrin I-II (6 microgram kg-1 h-1). Pancreatic juice was diverted to the exterior and gastric secretion was collected. Upon reaching a gastric secretory plateau, porcine trypsinogen was infused intraduodenally at doses of 5, 10, 20, 40, 80 and 160 mg. Each test was continued for a further 60 min. Control was made with isotonic saline. There was a dose-related inhibition of the gastrin-stimulated gastric acid output. This inhibition reached a maximum of 50% with 40 mg of intraduodenal trypsinogen, showing no increase with higher doses.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of several superactive analogs of somatostatin on gastric acid response to various exogenous and endogenous stimulants were investigated in conscious dogs and rats with gastric fistulae (GF). The inhibition was compared to that induced by somatostatin-14 (S-S-14) at two dose levels. Several octapeptide analogs of somatostatin including D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Trp-NH2 (RC-160) and D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2 (RC-121), which were superactive in tests on suppression of GH levels, were 4-5 times more potent than S-S-14 in inhibiting desglugastrin-stimulated gastric acid secretion in GF dogs. The analog RC-160 also reduced the rise in serum gastrin levels and gastric acid secretion induced by sham feeding (SF) in dogs with gastric and esophageal fistulae (EF), but did not decrease food consumption. Gastric acid secretion induced by histamine (80 micrograms/kg/h) in dogs was not affected by 1-5 micrograms/kg/h of analog RC-121 or by 5 micrograms/kg/h of S-S-14. Analogs RC-160, RC-121, and RC-98-I (D-Trp-Cys-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Cys-Thr-NH2) and others also powerfully inhibited desglugastrin-induced potent as S-S-14 in dogs but its activity was higher in rats. The results indicate that octapeptide analogs which are superactive in GH-inhibition tests are also more potent than S-S-14 in suppressing gastric acid secretion. These findings may be of clinical value.  相似文献   

16.
The purpose of these studies was to measure circulating gastrin and somatostatin concentrations during sham feeding in humans and to evaluate the effect of two doses of intravenous atropine on circulating concentrations of these peptides. Gastric acid and bicarbonate secretion and pulse rate were also measured. Sham feeding increased plasma gastrin concentrations by approximately 15 pg/ml but had no effect on plasma somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI). A small dose of atropine (5 micrograms/kg) augmented plasma gastrin concentrations during sham feeding significantly (P less than 0.01), but did not affect plasma SLI. Atropine also significantly inhibited gastric acid secretion and gastric bicarbonate secretion (by 62% and 52%, respectively), but pulse rate was not affected. A larger dose of atropine (15 micrograms/kg intravenously) suppressed plasma gastrin concentrations significantly compared to the smaller 5 micrograms/kg atropine dose (P less than 0.02), so that plasma gastrin concentrations when 15 micrograms/kg atropine was given were not significantly different from those during the control study. 15 micrograms/kg atropine reduced gastric acid and bicarbonate secretion by 81% and 66%, respectively, and also increased pulse rate by 15 min-1. These studies indicate that small doses of atropine enhance vagally mediated gastrin release in humans, probably by blocking a cholinergic inhibitory pathway for gastrin release. Although the nature of this cholinergic inhibitory mechanism is unclear, we found no evidence to incriminate somatostatin. Our finding that the larger dose of atropine reduced serum gastrin concentrations compared with the smaller dose suggests that certain vagal-cholinergic pathways may facilitate gastrin release.  相似文献   

17.
We studied the effect of physiological and supraphysiological plasma levels of gastrin and secretin on duodenal calcium absorption (CaA) in the growing rat. During infusion of either synthetic human gastrin 17 I (0.05, 0.1 or 0.25 micrograms/kg BW h, i.v.), synthetic porcine secretion (0.06, 0.125 or 0.25 CU/kg BW h, i.v.) in vehicle (0.15% BSA in saline), or vehicle alone, duodenal lumen-to-plasma flux, plasma-to-lumen flux and the net absorption of calcium were determined by in situ perfusion. While plasma gastrin- or secretin-like immunoreactivity rose to postprandial-like levels with increasing infusion doses, the bidirectional Ca fluxes, serum Ca, parathyroid hormone and concomitant urinary Ca excretion were not changed by any hormone infusion as compared with rats receiving intravenous vehicle only. We conclude that a physiological short-term regulating role of these hormones in duodenal CaA is unlikely in the growing rat.  相似文献   

18.
Four dogs with chronic gastric fistulas were give intravenous bombesin nonapeptide (B9), ranatensin, and litorin by constant infusion for 90 min at 1.2 micrograms x kg-1 on separate days. A dose response study with substance P (1.5, 3.0, 60, 18 and 54 micrograms x kg-1 x h-1) was also carried out and all tests compared to a standard protein meal (10g x kg-1). Plasma gastrin and PP were measured by radioimmunoassay and gastric acid by autobiuret titration. Substance P failed to stimulate gastric acid secretion or release either pancreatic polypeptide (PP) or gastrin. Basal gastrin levels were 8 +/-2 fmol/ml. The peak increment of gastrin released by bombesin was 95 +/- 16, ranatensin 22 +/- 6, litorin 18 +/- 4, and meal 39 +/- 5 fmol/ml. Bombesin caused significantly greater release of gastrin than a meal, litorin or ranatensin (P less than 0.01). Basal gastric secretion was 23 +/- 4 microequiv./min. B9 produced a peak acid secretion of 356 +/- 124 muequiv./min. There was no significant difference between the bombesin-like peptides (P less than 0.01). Basal plasma PP was 38 +/- 12 fmol/ml. B9 produced a peak PP increment of 600 +/- 50, litorin 137 +/- 36, ranatensin 98 +/- 11, and a meal 305 +/- 58 fmol/ml. B9 released significantly more PP than either litorin of ranatensin (P less than 0.01). The different amino acid sequences of the peptides are probably responsible for their potency. The substitution of a penultimate phenylalanine residue in litorin and ranatensin for leucine in bombesin does not prevent PP or gastrin release by bombesin-like peptides. Since bombesin-like peptides are widely distributed in the gastrointestinal tract of man and stimulate both acid and gut hormone secretion, it is possible that they might play a physiological role in the modulation of gastrointestinal function.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
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   

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