首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
In the oxyntic mucosa of the mammalian stomach, histamine is stored in ECL cells and in mucosal mast cells. In the rat, at least 80 percent of oxyntic mucosal histamine resides in the ECL cells. Histamine is a key factor in the regulation of gastric acid secretion. Following depletion of ECL-cell histamine by treatment with alpha-fluoromethylhistidine (alpha-FMH), basal acid secretion was reduced, and gastrin-stimulated acid secretion was abolished. Vagally-induced acid secretion (by insulin injection or pylorus ligation) was unaffected by alpha-FMH treatment but inhibited by an H2 antagonist. These results suggest that gastrin stimulates acid secretion via release of ECL-cell histamine, whereas vagally-induced acid secretion--although histamine-dependent--does not rely on ECL-cell histamine. Gastrin is known to have a trophic effect on the oxyntic mucosa. By combining long-term hypergastrinemia with continuous infusion of alpha-FMH, we were able to show that gastrin-evoked trophic effects in the stomach do not depend on ECL-cell histamine.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Somatostatin cells in the stomach of the rat have a characteristic shape and distribution. In the antral mucosa they occur together with gastrin cells and enterochromaffin cells at the base of the glands. In the oxyntic mucosa they are scattered along the entire glands with some predominance in the zone of parietal cells. Throughout the gastric mucosa the somatostatin cells possess long and slender processes that emerge from the base of the cell and end in clublike swellings. Such processes appear to contact a certain proportion of neighbouring gastrin cells in the antral mucosa and parietal cells in the oxyntic mucosa.Exogenous somatostatin given by intravenous infusion to conscious rats counteracted the release of gastrin stimulated by feeding, elevated antral pH or vagal excitation. Gastrin causes parietal cells to secrete HCl and endocrine cells in the oxyntic mucosa to mobilise and synthesise histamine. Somatostatin is known to block the response of the parietal cells to gastrin. In contrast, somatostatin did not block the response of the histamine-storing endocrine cells to gastrin, perhaps because these endocrine cells lack receptors to somatostatin. Conceivably, somatostatin in the gastric mucosa has a paracrine mode of action. The observations of the present study suggest that somatostatin may affect some, but not all of the various cell types in the stomach. Under physiological conditions this selectivity may be achieved in the following ways: 1) Communication may be based on direct cell-to-cell contact. 2) Only certain cell types are supplied with somatostatin receptors.  相似文献   

3.
The enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells represent the predominant endocrine cell population in the acid-producing part of the stomach of both experimental animals and man. These cells actively produce and store histamine in addition to an anticipated but as yet unidentified peptide hormone and are under the control of gastrin. An acute gastrin stimulus causes exocytosis of the cytoplasmic granules/vesicles (and release of histamine and activation of the histamine-forming enzyme, histidine decarboxylase), while a more sustained gastrin stimulus causes first hypertrophy and then hyperplasia of the ECL cells in the rat (at most, a fivefold increase in the cell number). These effects can be demonstrated following infusion of gastrin or following an increase in the concentration of circulating gastrin of endogenous origin. The growth of the ECL cells reflects an accelerated self-replication rate. As studied in the rat, the self-replication rate is accelerated quite soon after induction of hypergastrinemia (blockade of acid secretion), the rate is maximally elevated within two weeks and then declines to control values at ten and 20 weeks despite the sustained hypergastrinemia. Lifelong hypergastrinemia in rats is associated not only with ECL-cell hyperplasia but also with an increased incidence of ECL-cell carcinoids. Recently, we could show that alpha-fluoromethylhistidine, which is a suicide inhibitor of histidine decarboxylase, effectively depletes the ECL cells of histamine and that the histamine-depleted ECL cells respond to gastrin with hyperplasia in a manner identical to normal ECL cells. Other factors beside gastrin seem to participate in the control of ECL-cell function and proliferation. Although exogenous somatostatin is known to suppress the activity of the ECL cells, we have failed to obtain evidence that the somatostatin cells in the oxyntic mucosa play a role in the physiological control of the ECL cells. The vagus, however, is important for the ability of the ECL cells to respond to gastrin. This conclusion is based on the observation that vagal denervation suppresses the hyperplastic response of the ECL cells to gastrin. Porta-cava shunting, on the other hand, greatly enhances the responsiveness of the ECL cells to gastrin. The mechanism behind this effect is unknown.  相似文献   

4.
The oxyntic mucosa of the rat stomach is rich in ECL cells which produce and secrete histamine in response to gastrin. Histamine and the histamine-forming enzyme histidine decarboxylase (HDC) have been claimed to occur also in the gastrin-secreting G cells in the antrum. In the present study, we used a panel of five HDC antisera and one histamine antiserum to investigate whether histamine and HDC are exclusive to the ECL cells. By immunocytochemistry, we could show that the ECL cells were stained with the histamine antiserum and all five HDC antisera. The G cells, however, were not stained with the histamine antiserum, but with three of the five HDC antisera. Thus, histamine and HDC coexist in the ECL cells (oxyntic mucosa) but not in G cells (antral mucosa). Western blot analysis revealed a typical pattern of HDC-immunoreactive bands (74, 63 and 54 kDa) in oxyntic mucosa extracts with all five antisera. In antral extracts, immunoreactive bands were detected with three of the five HDC antisera (same as above); the pattern of immunoreactivity differed from that in oxyntic mucosa. Food intake of fasted rats or treatment with the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole raised the HDC activity and the HDC protein content of the oxyntic mucosa but not of the antral mucosa; the HDC activity in the antrum was barely detectable. We suggest that the HDC-like immunoreactivity in the antrum represents a cross-reaction with non-HDC proteins and conclude that histamine and HDC are hallmark features of ECL cells but not of G cells.  相似文献   

5.
Histamine-producing ECL cells and ghrelin-producing A-like cells are endocrine/paracrine cell populations in the acid-producing part of the rat stomach. While the A-like cells operate independently of gastrin, the ECL cells respond to gastrin with mobilization of histamine and chromogranin A (CGA)-derived peptides, such as pancreastatin. Gastrin is often assumed to be the driving force behind the postnatal development of the gastric mucosa in general and the ECL cells in particular. We tested this assumption by examining the oxyntic mucosa (with ECL cells and A-like cells) in developing rats under the influence of YF476, a cholecystokinin-2 (CCK(2)) receptor antagonist. The drug was administered by weekly subcutaneous injections starting at birth. The body weight gain was not affected. Weaning occurred at days 15-22 in both YF476-treated and age-matched control rats. Circulating gastrin was low at birth and reached adult levels 2 weeks after birth. During and after weaning (but not before), YF476 greatly raised the serum gastrin concentration (because of abolished acid feedback inhibition of gastrin release). The weight of the stomach was unaffected by YF476 during the first 2-3 weeks after birth. From 4 to 5 weeks of age, the weight and thickness of the gastric mucosa were lower in YF476-treated rats than in controls. Pancreastatin-immunoreactive cells (i.e. all endocrine cells in the stomach) and ghrelin-immunoreactive cells (A-like cells) were few at birth and increased gradually in number until 6-8 weeks of age (control rats). At first, YF476 did not affect the development of the pancreastatin-immunoreactive cells, but a few weeks after weaning, the cells were fewer in the YF476 rats. The ECL-cell parameters (oxyntic mucosal histamine and pancreastatin concentrations, the histidine decarboxylase (HDC) activity, the HDC mRNA levels and serum pancreastatin concentration) increased slowly until weaning in both YF476-treated and control rats. From then on, there was a further increase in the ECL-cell parameters in control rats but not in YF476 rats. The postnatal development of the ghrelin cells (i.e. the A-like cells) and of the A-like cell parameters (the oxyntic mucosal ghrelin concentration and the serum ghrelin concentrations) was not affected by YF476 at any point.We conclude that gastrin affects neither the oxyntic mucosa nor the endocrine cells before weaning. After weaning, CCK(2) receptor blockade is associated with a somewhat impaired development of the oxyntic mucosa and the ECL cells. While gastrin stimulation is of crucial importance for the onset of acid secretion during weaning and for the activation of ECL-cell histamine formation and secretion, the mucosal and ECL-cell growth at this stage is only partly gastrin-dependent. In contrast, the development of the A-like cells is independent of gastrin at all stages.  相似文献   

6.
The oxyntic mucosa of the mammalian stomach is rich in endocrine cells, such as ECL cells, A-like cells, somatostatin cells, D1/P cells and, in some species, enterochromaffin cells. The various endocrine cell types can be distinguished on the basis of their characteristic cytoplasmic granules and vesicles. The ECL cells contain numerous large secretory vesicles and relatively few, small electron-dense granules and small clear microvesicles. We have suggested that in the rat the ECL cells contain most of the gastric histamine with the secretory vesicles as the major histamine storage site in these cells. α-Fluoromethylhistidine is an irreversible inhibitor of histidine decarboxylase, the histamine-forming enzyme. We have previously shown that this enzyme inhibitor depletes histamine from the ECL cells in the rat and reduces the number of secretory vesicles in the cytoplasm. In the present study, we have examined whether α-fluoromethylhistidine affects the ECL cells in other species and whether it affects other types of endocrine cells in the oxyntic mucosa of the rat. Mice, rats and hamsters were treated with the inhibitor (3 mg/kg per h) via minipumps subcutaneously for 24 h. This treatment lowered the oxyntic mucosal histamine concentration by 65–90% and the number and volume density of the secretory vesicles by 85–95% in the ECL cells of the three species examined. In contrast, the number and volume density of granules and microvesicles were not greatly affected. No evidence was found for an effect of α-fluoromethylhistidine on A-like cells, somatostatin cells or D1/P cells of the rat stomach, suggesting that, unlike the ECL cells, they do not contain histamine. Received: 18 January 1996 / Accepted: 23 May 1996  相似文献   

7.
Ghrelin is a 28 a.a. gastric peptide, recently identified as a natural ligand of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (orphan receptor distinct from the receptor for growth hormone releasing hormone). In the present study, radioimmunoassay demonstrated ghrelin-like material in the rat oxyntic mucosa with moderate amounts also in antrum and duodenum. Small amounts were found in the distal intestines and pancreas. Northern blot analysis revealed abundant ghrelin mRNA in the oxyntic mucosa. Immunocytochemistry demonstrated ghrelin-immunoreactivity in endocrine-like cells in the oxyntic mucosa. Such cells occurred in low numbers also in the antrum and duodenum. The rat oxyntic mucosa is rich in endocrine (chromogranin A/pancreastatin-immunoreactive) cells, such as the histamine-rich ECL cells (65-75% of the endocrine cells), the A-like cells (20-25%) and the D cells (somatostatin cells) (10%). The ghrelin-immunoreactive (IR) cells contained pancreastatin but differed from ECL cells and D cells by being devoid of histamine-forming enzyme (ECL cell constituent) and somatostatin (D cell constituent). Hence, ghrelin seems to occur in the A-like cells. The ghrelin-IR cells in the antrum were distinct from the gastrin cells, the serotonin-containing enterochromaffin cells and the D cells. Conceivably, ghrelin cells in the antrum and distally in the intestines also belong to the A-like cell population. The concentration of ghrelin in the circulation was lowered by about 80% following the surgical removal of the acid-producing part of the stomach in line with the view that the oxyntic mucosa is the major source of ghrelin. The serum ghrelin concentration was higher in fasted rats than in fed rats; it was reduced upon re-feeding and seemed unaffected by 1-week treatment with the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole, resulting in elevated serum gastrin concentration. Infusion of gastrin-17 for 2 days failed to raise the serum ghrelin concentration. Omeprazole treatment for 10 weeks raised the level of HDC mRNA but not that of ghrelin mRNA or somatostatin mRNA in the oxyntic mucosa. Hence, unlike the ECL cells, ghrelin-containing A-like cells do not seem to operate under gastrin control.  相似文献   

8.
Gastrin is one of the main factors controlling enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cell endocrine function and growth. Long-standing hypergastrinemia may give rise to ECL cell carcinoids in the gastric corpus in man and in experimental models. We have analysed the expression and function of CCK-B/gastrin receptors in normal ECL cells and in ECL cell tumours (gastric carcinoids) of the African rodent Mastomys natalensis. Hypergastrinemia induced by short-term (5 days) histamine2-receptor blockade (loxtidine) resulted in increased histidine decarboxylase (HDC) mRNA expression in the gastric oxyntic mucosa. This increase was significantly and dose-dependently reversed by selective CCK-B/gastrin receptor blockade (YM022). Long-term (12 months) hypergastrinemia, induced by histamine2-receptor blockade, gave rise to ECL cell carcinoids in the gastric oxyntic mucosa. CCK-B/gastrin receptor mRNA was only slightly elevated while HDC mRNA expression was eight-fold elevated in ECL cell carcinoids and was not influenced by CCK-B/gastrin receptor blockade. Thus CCK-B/gastrin receptor blockade of hypergastrinemic animals reduces the HDC mRNA expression in normal mucosa but not in ECL cell carcinoids. These results demonstrate that HDC mRNA expression in neoplastic ECL cells is not controlled by CCK-B/gastrin receptors.  相似文献   

9.
Surgical removal of the acid-producing part of the stomach (oxyntic mucosa) reduces bone mass through mechanisms not yet fully understood. The existence of an osteotropic hormone produced by the so-called ECL cells has been suggested. These cells, which are numerous in the oxyntic mucosa, operate under the control of circulating gastrin. Both gastrin and an extract of the oxyntic mucosa decrease blood calcium and stimulate Ca2+ uptake into bone. Conceivably, gastrin lowers blood calcium indirectly by releasing a hypothetical hormone from the ECL cells. The present study investigated, by means of fura-2 fluorometry, the effect of extracts of preparations enriched in ECL cell granules/vesicles from rat oxyntic mucosa on mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ in three osteoblast-like cell lines, UMR-106.01, MC3T3-E1 and Saos-2, and of extracts of isolated ECL cells in UMR-106.01 cells. The extracts were found to induce a dose-related rapid increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentrations in the osteoblast-like cells. The response was not due to histamine or pancreastatin, known ECL cell constituents, and could be abolished by pre-digesting the extracts with exo-aminopeptidase. The results show that the increase in [Ca2+](i) reflects a mobilization of Ca2+ from the endoplasmic reticulum. The observation of an increase in [Ca2+](i) also in murine embryonic fibroblasts show that the response is not limited to osteoblastic cells. The finding that the extracts evoked a typical Ca2+ -mediated second messenger response in osteoblastic cells provides evidence for the existence of a novel osteotropic peptide hormone (gastrocalcin), produced in the ECL cells, and supports the view that gastrectomy-induced osteopathy may reflect a lack of this hormone.  相似文献   

10.
ECL cells are endocrine/paracrine cells in the oxyntic mucosa. They produce, store and secrete histamine and chromogranin A-derived peptides such as pancreastatin. The regulation of ECL-cell secretion has been studied by several groups using purified ECL cells, isolated from rat stomachs. Reports from different laboratories often disagree. The purpose of the present study was to re-evaluate the discrepancies by studying histamine (or pancreastatin) secretion from standardized preparations of pure, well-functioning ECL cells. Cells from rat oxyntic mucosa were dispersed by pronase digestion, purified by repeated counter-flow elutriation and subjected to density gradient centrifugation. The final preparation consisted of more than 90% ECL cells (verified by histamine and/or histidine decarboxylase immunocytochemistry). They were maintained in primary culture for 48 h before they were exposed to candidate stimulants and inhibitors for 30 min after which the medium was collected for determination of mobilized histamine (or pancreastatin). Gastrin-17 and sulphated cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8s) raised histamine secretion 4-fold, the EC(50) for both peptides being around 100 pM. The neuropeptide pituitary adenylate cyclase activating peptide (PACAP-27) (5-fold increase) and the related neuropeptides vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and peptide histidine isoleucine (PHI) (3-fold increase) mobilized histamine with similar potency (EC(50) ranging from 80 to 140 pM). Adrenaline, isoprenaline and terbutaline stimulated secretion by activating a beta2 receptor subtype, while acetylcholine and carbachol were without effect. Secretion experiments were invariably run in parallel with a gastrin standard curve. Somatostatin, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and the PGE1 congener misoprostol inhibited PACAP- and gastrin-stimulated secretion by more than 90%, with IC(50) values ranging from 90-720 (somatostatin) to 40-200 (misoprostol) pM. The neuropeptide galanin inhibited secretion by 60-70% with a potency similar to that of somatostatin. Proposed inhibitors such as peptide YY, neuropeptide Y and the cytokines interleukin 1-beta and tumor necrosis factor alpha induced at best a moderate inhibition of gastrin- or PACAP-stimulated secretion at high concentrations, while calcitonin gene-related peptide, pancreatic polypeptide and histamine itself were without effect. Inhibition of gastrin- or PACAP-stimulated secretion was routinely compared to a somatostatin standard curve. In conclusion, gastrin, PACAP, VIP/PHI and adrenaline stimulated secretion. Somatostatin and PGE2 were powerful inhibitors of both gastrin- and PACAP-stimulated secretion; although equally potent, galanin was less effective than somatostatin and PGE2.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Treatment of chickens, hamsters and guinea-pigs with large doses of the long-acting antisecretory agent omeprazole for 10 weeks resulted in elevated serum gastrin levels and in increased stomach weight and mass of oxyntic mucosa. Also the antral gastrin cell density was increased. Another striking effect was the hyperplasia of the histamine-producing enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells — a prominent endocrine cell population with unknown function — in the oxyntic mucosa. Accordingly, the gastric mucosal histamine concentration and rate of histamine formation were increased in all three species. The results suggest that marked and long-lasting suppression of acid secretion leads to elevated serum gastrin levels and diffuse ECL cell hyperplasia not only in the rat, as previously seen, but also in the chicken, hamster and guinea-pig; this hyperplasia is associated with accelerated histamine formation in all three species. The following sequence of events is suggested to occur in mammalian as well as submammalian vertebrates: suppression of acid secretion — hypergastrinaemia — ECL cell hyperplasia.  相似文献   

12.
The enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells of the oxyntic mucosa (fundus) of the stomach produce, store and secrete histamine, chromogranin A-derived peptides such as pancreastatin, and an unanticipated but as yet unidentified peptide hormone. The cells are stimulated by gastrin and pituitary adenylate cyclase activating peptide and suppressed by somatostatin and galanin. Choline esters and histamine seem to be without effect on ECL cell secretion. The existence of a gastrin-ECL cell axis not only explains how gastrin stimulates acid secretion but also may help to explore the functional significance of the ECL cells with respect to the nature and bioactivity of its peptide hormone. From the results of studies of gastrectomized/fundectomized and gastrin-treated rats, it has been speculated that the anticipated ECL-cell peptide hormone acts on bone metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Histamine-containing enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells are numerous in the gastric mucosa. They operate under the control of gastrin. ECL-cell tumors (gastric carcinoids) may arise as a consequence of sustained hypergastrinemia. For reasons unknown, such tumors have a female preponderance both in laboratory animals and humans. The present study consisted of four experiments exploring the possibility that gender-related factors might affect rat ECL cells. 1) A gender difference in terms of serum gastrin concentration and oxyntic mucosal histidine decarboxylase (HDC) activity appeared in Sprague-Dawley but not Wistar rats. Ultrastructural appearance of the ECL cells did not differ between genders. 2) During the different phases of the estrous cycle, the serum gastrin concentration, HDC activity and histamine concentration did not change. 3) During pregnancy, the serum gastrin concentration was suppressed, while it was increased during lactation. The HDC activity and the histamine concentration of the oxyntic mucosa were correlated with the levels of circulating gastrin. 4) Twelve-month treatment with estrogen-like agents, dieldrin and/or toxaphene (alone or in combination) was without any effect on the ECL cells neither in male nor in female rats. In conclusion, the ECL cells are under the control of gastrin, but probably not hormones that involve in the estrous cycle and pregnancy and lactation in rats. Possible gender-related factors behind the female preponderance of ECL-cell tumors remain unknown.  相似文献   

15.
Summary In the rat, gastric histamine is stored predominantly in the enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells, which are located basally in the oxyntic mucosa. The functional significance of histamine in the ECL cells is a matter of speculation. In this study the effect of depletion of histamine on the properties and ultrastructure of the ECL cells was examined. Histamine synthesis was inhibited with -fluoromethylhistidine (3 mg·kg-1·h-1) given via osmotic minipumps over a period of 24 h. The treatment reduced the histidine decarboxylase activity (approximately 20% remaining) and histamine concentration (less than 20% remaining) in the oxyntic mucosa, as well as the intensity of histamine- and chromogranin A-immunostaining in the ECL cells, compared to control rats. The cytoplasmic (secretory) granules/vesicles were greatly reduced in number and size following -fluoromethylhistidine administration. The histamine immunostaining of the mast cells, which occurs at the mucosal surface and in the submucosa, appeared unaffected. We conclude that ECL cell histamine accounts for at least 80% of the total oxyntic mucosal histamine in the rat and that it represents a more mobile pool than mast cell histamine. The reduction in the number and size of the ECL cell granules/vesicles following histamine depletion is in accord with the idea that they represent the storage site for histamine.  相似文献   

16.
Histamine in the rat stomach resides in enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells and mast cells. The ECL cells are peptide-hormone-producing endocrine cells known to release histamine and chromogranin-A-derived peptides (such as pancreastatin) in response to gastrin. Ischemia (induced by clamping of the celiac artery or by gastric submucosal microinfusion of the vasoconstrictor endothelin) mobilizes large amounts of ECL-cell histamine in a burst-like manner. This report examines the ECL-cell response to ischemia and compares it with that induced by gastrin in rats. Arterial clamping (30 min) and gastric submucosal microinfusion (3 h) of endothelin, vasopressin, or adrenaline caused ischemia, manifested as a raised lactate/pyruvate ratio and mucosal damage. Whereas microinfusion of gastrin released both histamine and pancreastatin, ischemia mobilized histamine only. The mucosal concentrations of histamine and pancreastatin, the number and immunostaining intensity of the ECL cells, and the ultrastructure of the ECL cells were unchanged following ischemia. The long-term effects of ischemia and reperfusion (60-90 min) on gastric mucosa were examined in rats treated with the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole for 4 days. The activity of the ECL cells was suppressed (reflected in low histamine-forming capacity) but returned to normal within 1 week, illustrating the ability of the ECL cells to recover. We suggest that ischemia mobilizes cytosolic ECL-cell histamine without affecting the storage of histamine (and pancreastatin) in the secretory organelles and without causing lasting ECL-cell impairment.  相似文献   

17.
Relationship of ECL cells and gastric neoplasia.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cell in the oxyntic mucosa has a key role in the regulation of gastric secretion since it synthesizes and releases the histamine regulating the acid secretion from the parietal cell. Gastrin is the main regulator of the ECL cell function and growth. Long-term hypergastrinemia induces ECL cell hyperplasia, and if continued, neoplasia. ECL cell carcinoids occur in man after long-term hypergastrinemia in conditions like pernicious anemia and gastrinoma. There is also accumulating evidence that a proportion of gastric carcinomas of the diffuse type is derived from the ECL cell. Furthermore, the ECL cell may, by producing substances with angiogenic effects (histamine and basic fibroblast growth factor), be particularly prone to develop malignant tumors. Although the general opinion is that gastrin itself has a direct effect on the oxyntic mucosal stem cell, it cannot be excluded that the general trophic effect of gastrin on the oxyntic mucosa is mediated by histamine or other substances from the ECL cell, and that the ECL cell, therefore, could play a role also in the tumorigenesis/carcinogenesis of gastric carcinomas of intestinal type.  相似文献   

18.
The ECL cells in the oxyntic mucosa of rat stomach produce histamine and chromogranin A-derived peptides such as pancreastatin. The cells respond to gastrin via cholecystokinin-2 (CCK2) receptors. A CCK2 receptor blockade was induced by treatment (for up to 8 weeks) with two receptor antagonists, YM022 and YF476. Changes in ECL-cell morphology were examined by immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy, while changes in ECL cell-related biochemical parameters were monitored by measuring serum pancreastatin and oxyntic mucosal pancreastatin, and histamine concentrations, and histidine decarboxylase (HDC) activity. The CCK2 receptor blockade reduced the ECL-cell density only marginally, if at all, but transformed the ECL cells from slender, elongated cells with prominent projections to small, spherical cells without projections. The Golgi complex and the rough endoplasmic reticulum were diminished. Secretory vesicles were greatly reduced in volume density in the trans Golgi area. Circulating pancreastatin concentration and oxyntic mucosal HDC activity were lowered within a few hours. Oxyntic mucosal histamine and pancreastatin concentrations were reduced only gradually. The CCK2 receptor blockade was found to prevent the effects of omeprazole-evoked hypergastrinaemia on the ECL-cell activity and density. In conclusion, gastrin, acting on CCK2 receptors, is needed to maintain the shape, size and activity of the ECL cells, but not for maintaining the ECL-cell population.  相似文献   

19.
20.
ECL cells produce histamine and chromogranin A, and are restricted to the oxyntic mucosa of the stomach. ECL cell ontogeny has been studied in some detail in the rat. Using histidine decarboxylase immunostaining, the first ECL cells can be demonstrated at embryonic day 17. Immunoreactive histamine and chromogranin A appear one day later. At embryonic day 20, the vesicular monoamine transporter type 2 is also present in the ECL cells. Neonatally the ECL cell proliferation is slow; however, one to three weeks postnatally there is a rapid growth of ECL cells to populate the basal half of the glands. Gastrin is known to be an important stimulator of ECL cell activity and growth in the adult rat. As revealed in recent mouse gene knock out models gastrin does not seem to play a role in the early ECL cell differentiation and development.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号