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 31 毫秒
1.
Growth hormone releasing factor (GRF), a 44-residue peptide originally isolated from human pancreatic tumors, shows structural similarities to the members of the secretin-vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) peptides. This study was designed to determine the effects of human GRF (hGRF-(1-44] on pancreatic secretion in vivo in conscious dogs and in vitro in dispersed rat pancreatic acini. GRF given i.v. in graded doses in dogs caused a small but significant stimulation of pancreatic HCO3- and protein outputs and potentiated secretin- and cholecystokinin (CCK)-induced pancreatic HCO3- but not protein secretion. When given together with somatostatin, GRF failed to reverse the inhibitory action of this peptide on HCO3- and protein responses to secretin plus CCK in dogs. Studies in vitro dispersed rat pancreatic acini showed that GRF added to the incubation medium of these acini caused an increase in basal amylase release and shifted to the left the amylase dose-response curve to caerulein and urecholine but failed to affect the amylase response to VIP. This study indicates that GRF in vivo stimulates basal and augments secretin- or CCK-induced pancreatic HCO3- secretion and that this is probably due to direct stimulatory action of the peptide on pancreatic secretory cells.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) on gastric emptying of a saline solution was further investigated in six dogs prepared with gastric fistulas and chronic cerebroventricular guides and in four other dogs with chronic gastric fistulas and pancreatic (Herrera) cannulas. Intravenous infusion of CRF significantly inhibited gastric emptying whereas intracerebroventricular injection of CRF had no effect. Pharmacologic blockade of β-adrenergic system by propranolol did not modify intravenous CRF induced delay in gastric emptying. Intravenous CRF did not influence basal pancreatic secretion whereas secretin infused stimulated bicarbonate secretion. These results indicate that intravenous but not intracerebroventricular administration of CRF inhibited gastric emptying of a saline solution in dogs. The inhibitory effect of intravenous CRF on gastric emptying is not mediated by the β-adrenergic nervous system, and not secondary to the release of other peptides that affect both pancreatic secretion and gastric emptying such as cholecystokinin and peptide YY.  相似文献   

3.
Helodermin, VIP and PHI, which share a high degree of homology with secretin, have been identified in the gut but their physiological role is unknown. In this study 3 series of tests were carried out to determine the actions of helodermin, VIP and PHI on pancreatic secretion in 6 conscious dogs and amylase release from the dispersed canine pancreatic acini and to correlate the alterations in pancreatic secretory and circulatory effects in 24 anesthetized dogs. Helodermin, VIP and PHI infused i.v. in graded doses (12.5-200 pmol/kg.h) resulted in a dose-dependent increase in pancreatic HCO3 secretion reaching, respectively, 100%, 7% and 2% of secretin maximum. When combined with constant dose infusion of CCK-8 (100 pmol/kg.h), helodermin but not VIP or PHI augmented dose-dependently the HCO3 secretion. When added in various concentrations (10(-10)-10(-5)M) to the incubation medium of dispersed pancreatic acini only helodermin but not VIP or PHI increased dose-dependently amylase release reaching about 50% of CCK-8 maximum. In anesthetized dogs, the pancreatic blood flow (PBF) measured by electromagnetic blood flowmetry showed an immediate and dose-dependent increase following the injections of various doses of helodermin, VIP, PHI and secretin, the peak blood flow preceding by about 1 min the peak secretory stimulation. This study shows that helodermin resembles secretin in its potent pancreatic HCO3 stimulation but differs from VIP or PHI which are poor secretagogues but potent vasodilators. We conclude that if tested peptides are released in the gut, helodermin, like secretin, may be involved in the hormonal stimulation of exocrine pancreas, whereas VIP and PHI may serve mainly as vasodilators in the pancreatic circulation.  相似文献   

4.
Enkephalins have been detected in vagal nerves and myenteric plexus neurons but no study has been performed to determine their action on vagally stimulated gastric and pancreatic secretion. In this study we infused IV methionine-enkephalin (Met-enk) alone, naloxone (a pure opiate antagonist) alone, or their combination before, during and after vagal stimulation in 4 dogs with esophageal, gastric and pancreatic fistulas. For the comparison, atropine was given before, during and after vagal stimulation in the same animals. Vagal stimulation was obtained by 15 min sham-feeding, which produced an increase in gastric H+ output to a peak of about 75% of the maximal response to pentagastrin and pancreatic protein secretion amounting to about 71% of the maximal response to caerulein. It was accompanied by a significant rise in serum gastrin and pancreatic polypeptide (PP) levels. Met-enk inhibited significantly both gastric H+ and pancreatic protein secretion and reduced plasma PP but not gastrin levels. Similar effects were obtained after the administration of atropine. The effects of Met-enk were partly reversed by the addition of naloxone. We conclude that (1) enkephalin suppresses vagally stimulated gastric and pancreatic secretion and plasma PP release; (2) these secretory effects of enkephalin seem to be mediated by opiate receptors and could be explained by its inhibitory action on acetylcholine release (“anticholinergic” action) in the stomach and the pancreas.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of a cyclic hexapeptide analog of somatostatin, [cyclo(Pro-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Phe)] (cyclo-SS), administered intravenously (iv) or instilled into the duodenum (id) on the pancreatic response to endogenous (meal and duodenal acidification) and exogenous (secretin, CCK) stimulants were compared in five dogs with esophageal, gastric, and pancreatic fistulae. Cyclo-SS given iv in graded doses against a constant background stimulation with secretin caused a similar and dose-dependent inhibition of pancreatic HCO3 and protein secretion being about twice as potent as somatostatin-14 (SS-14). Cyclo-SS, whether applied topically to the duodenal mucosa in a dose of 1 microgram/kg or given iv at a dose of 0.5 microgram/kg-hr, resulted in a similar inhibition of pancreatic secretion induced by feeding a meat meal, sham-feeding, duodenal acidification, or infusion of secretin or CCK. The inhibition of pancreatic secretion by cyclo-SS was due in part to direct inhibitory action on the exocrine pancreas as well as to the suppression of the release of secretin, insulin, and pancreatic polypeptide. It is concluded that cyclo-SS is a more potent inhibitor of pancreatic secretion than SS-14 and that it is active when administered both parenterally and intraduodenally.  相似文献   

6.
In anesthetized dogs given secretin intravenously in doses doubling every 60 min and ranging from 0.5 to 8 units per kg body weight per hr, cyclic-AMP levels in pancreatic tissue rose continuously, whereas DNA concentrations were slightly decreased. Bicarbonate concentrations and bicarbonate outputs, cyclic-AMP tissue concentrations and bicarbonate outputs, as well as cyclic-AMP tissue concentrations and juice outputs, were significantly correlated. In conscious pancreatic fistula dogs, there was also a significant correlation between cyclic-AMP and bicarbonate concentrations and outputs in the pancreatic juice after stimulation by exogenous secretin. Accordingly, enhanced release of endogenous secretin achieved by intraduodenal acidification led to a dose-dependent increase in bicarbonate and cyclic-AMP outputs in both conscious and anesthetized dogs. Phosphodiesterase inhibitors (aminophylline, caffeine, and papaverine) given alone to the conscious dogs did not initiate pancreatic bicarbonate secretion, but they potentiated bicarbonate responses to exogenous secretin. These data suggest that cyclic-AMP plays a part in secretin-stimulated pancreatic secretion.  相似文献   

7.
Action of phenylephrine (35 micrograms/Kg/min) alone or previously blocked by phentolamine (100 micrograms/Kg/min) on exocrine pancreatic secretion of anaesthetized rabbits has been studied, in basal state or under stimulation by secretin (1 C.U./Kg/h) or by the octapeptide of cholecystokinin (OP-CCK) (0.15 Ivy dog units/Kg/h). Phenylephrine increased arterial pressure. This effect was blocked by phentolamine. However no variations were seen in pancreatic blood flow in any of the experimental conditions assayed. Phenylephrine produced a secretin-like effect on hydroelectrolytic secretion in basal conditions. This action was maintained after the infusion of secretin but not after OP-CCK. This effect was not blocked by phentolamine. Phenylephrine increased protein secretion in the basal state, an action that was blocked by phentolamine. After secretin or OP-CCK stimulation phenylephrine did not increase protein secretion. It is concluded that phentolamine blocks the effects of phenylephrine on acinar cells but not on ductular cells.  相似文献   

8.
Human CRF given IV inhibited dose-dependently pentagastrin- but not histamine-induced gastric acid secretion. When added to the incubation medium of the isolated gastric glands, CRF did not alter the formation of HCl under basal conditions or after stimulation with histamine or DBcAMP. CRF caused a small but significant increase in pancreatic HCO3 and protein secretion. It augmented CCK-induced pancreatic protein and secretin-induced HCO3 secretion in vivo but failed to affect basal or stimulated (CCK and urecholine) amylase release by the in vitro dispersed pancreatic acini. This study indicates that CRF inhibits gastric and stimulates pancreatic secretion in vivo but not in vitro and these effects are indirect involving, at least in part, alterations in the pancreatic circulation.  相似文献   

9.
Factors regulating amylase secretion from chicken pancreatic acini in vitro   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In mammals, cholecystokinin regulates pancreatic exocrine secretion under physiological conditions. We have shown, however, that cholecystokinin at physiological concentrations does not induce pancreatic amylase secretion in birds. Therefore, we investigated the effects of various neurotransmitters and gut hormones on the pancreatic amylase secretory response in isolated chicken pancreatic acini. Acetylcholine (half-maximal stimulation at 800 nM) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (half-maximal stimulation at 40 pM) produced a concentration-dependent increase in amylase secretion at physiological concentrations. The combination of acetylcholine and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide produced an additive response in amylase secretion. Sodium nitroprusside, a spontaneous nitric oxide releaser, and bombesin, induced amylase secretion at concentrations greater than 10 nM and 100 nM, respectively. Gastrin and secretin increased amylase secretion at pharmacological concentrations (10 to 100 nM). Our findings suggest that neural regulation is important for pancreatic enzyme secretion in birds and the contribution of gut hormones seems to be physiologically unimportant.  相似文献   

10.
We have looked at the plasma concentrations of motilin, pancreatic polypeptide (PP), and somatostatin (STS) during the various phases of the interdigestive motor complex (IDMC) in dogs. As expected, motilin cyclical increase was always associated with the phase III of the IDMC. Statistical analysis of PP variations revealed a significant rise 10 min before duodenal phase III; however, in individual animals, this relationship was inconsistent. Although a dose-related increase in PP blood levels was induced by administration of synthetic canine motilin (0-200 ng kg-1 iv), fasting plasma levels of PP were not correlated with the concentrations of circulating endogenous motilin. After truncal vagotomy, while motilin release and the intestinal motility pattern remained unaltered, the phase III associated cyclical increases of PP disappeared. Infusion of physiological amounts of PP (1 microgram kg-1 h-1 for 3 h) mimicking the postprandial release failed to reproduce a fed pattern type of intestinal motility and of motilin secretion. No statistical correlation could be established between STS plasma levels and the motor activity of the intestine. STS plasma levels were not correlated with circulating concentrations of motilin and the exogenous administration of physiological doses of synthetic canine motilin failed to modify STS plasma levels. Morphine (200 micrograms kg-1 iv) stimulated only the release of motilin. These data suggest that the role played by circulating concentrations of PP and STS in the control of the IDMC in dog is at most minimal.  相似文献   

11.
The effects on pancreatic responses of highly potent cyclic hexapeptide (cyclo (N-Me-Ala-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Phe)) (Veber analog) and octapeptide analogs of somatostatin such as D-Phe-Cys-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Cys-Thr-ol (SMS 201-995), D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2 (RC-121), and D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Trp-NH2 (RC-160) have been compared with somatostatin tetradecapeptide (SS-14) and atropine. The parameters evaluated were pancreatic responses to secretin and meat feeding in conscious dogs with chronic pancreatic fistula and amylase release from the dispersed pancreatic acini. The analogs were administered intravenously or intraduodenally. The cyclic hexapeptide and octapeptide analogs, given iv in graded doses against a constant background stimulation with secretin, produced similar and dose-dependent inhibition of pancreatic HCO3- and protein secretion. Analogs RC-121, RC-160, and the Veber analog were about two to four times more active than SS-14 in suppressing HCO3- secretion and equipotent in reducing protein secretion, but SMS 201-995 was only about half as potent as somatostatin in inhibiting HCO3-. RC-160 was effective in inhibiting secretin-induced protein secretion at lower doses than other analogs. In tests with feeding, SMS 201-995, the Veber analog, RC-121, and RC-160 were more potent inhibitors of exocrine pancreatic secretion of HCO3- and protein and exhibited more prolonged inhibitory effects than SS-14. The Veber analog, RC-121, and RC-160 were also more effective after intraduodenal administration. Atropine also caused significant inhibition of both HCO3- and protein responses to secretin and meal feeding. All four analogs decreased the postprandial insulin and pancreatic polypeptide release to a similar degree as SS-14. Neither SS-14 nor the analogs tested significantly affected basal or caerulein-, gastrin-, secretin-, or bethanechol-stimulated amylase release from the dispersed canine pancreatic acini. Atropine reduced amylase release induced by bethanechol, but not that stimulated by caerulein, gastrin, or secretin. This indicated that the analogs, as somatostatin, are ineffective as secretory inhibitors in vitro. We conclude that cyclic hexapeptide and octapeptide analogs are more potent and longer acting inhibitors of pancreatic secretion than somatostatin-14 in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Tachykinins (TK) are family of peptides including substance P (SP), substance K (SK) and neuromedin K (NK) that have been found in the nerves of the gastrointestinal tract and proposed to act as neurotransmitters to affect the motor, secretory and circulatory functions of the gut, but little is known about their action on the pancreas. In this study three series of tests were carried out to determine the action of SP, SK and NK on pancreatic secretion in conscious dogs and amylase release from the dispersed rat pancreatic acini and to correlate the alterations in pancreatic secretory and circulatory effects of TK in anesthetized dogs. SP, SK and NK infused i.v. in graded doses (0.12-1.0 microgram/kg per h) in conscious dogs stimulated pancreatic protein outputs reaching, respectively, 38% and 23% of the maximal response to CCK (40 pmol/kg per h). HCO3- outputs were also significantly increased but the highest response did not exceed about 5% of secretin (328 pmol/kg per h) maximum. Cholinergic blockade by atropine abolished the pancreatic responses to tachykinins. When added at various concentrations (10(-11)-10(-7) M) to the incubation medium of rat dispersed pancreatic acini, SK, SP and NK increased in concentration-dependent manner the release of amylase from the resting pancreatic acini and augmented the enzyme release induced by CCK-8 and by urecholine. In anesthetized dogs infused with a background dose of secretin (82 pmol/kg per h), addition of SP, SK and NK caused an immediate and dose-dependent increase in the pancreatic blood flow, oxygen consumption and pancreatic secretion accompanied by a dose-dependent decrease in arterial blood pressure. This study shows that TK are potent pancreatic circulatory stimulants and moderate secretagogues both in vivo and in vitro, acting, at least in part, via cholinergic pathway.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of L364718, a new CCK receptor antagonist, on CCK-8 stimulated pancreatic secretion and PP release were examined in three conscious dogs with pancreatic fistulas. L364718 (20 nmol/kg) caused a potent inhibition of CCK-8 stimulated pancreatic protein, amylase and trypsin secretion but not of volume and bicarbonate secretion. Release of PP by CCK was also significantly suppressed by L364718. The degree of inhibition by L364718 was dependent upon the amount of CCK-8 infused. This study demonstrates that L364718 acts as a potent antagonist of CCK's action on pancreatic enzyme secretion and PP release in dogs and suggests that this agent might be a useful tool for studying the physiological role of CCK in conscious animals.  相似文献   

14.
The ability of essential and nonessential amino acids to stimulate the release of CCK was investigated in dogs using a bioassay procedure based on the perfusion of intestinal Thiry-Vella loops and determing the increase of pancreatic protein response as well as the potentiation of pancreatin bicarbonate secretion by a background doses of secretin (0.2 units/kg/h). All essential amino acids, except threonine, and all nonessential amino acids except cysteine were effective in CCK release when perfused in equimolar concentration (50-mM) through the intestinal loop. The peak pancreatic protein in response to tryptophan was about 89% of the maximal response to exogenous CCK in a dose of 25 units/kg/h. These data have also indicated that tryptophan and phenyloalanine are able to release small amounts of secretin.  相似文献   

15.
The C-terminal tricosapeptide of secretin (S5-27) and two analogues, one with asparagine replacing aspartic acid in position 15 (15-Asn-S5--27) and one with lysine replacing aspartic acid in position 15 (15-Lys-S5-27) were tested for their abilities to interact with hormone receptors on pancreatic acinar cells. In interacting with the receptors which prefer vasoactive intestinal peptide (vasoactive intestinal peptide-preferring receptors), the apparent affinity of 15-Asn S5-27 was equal to that of 15-Lys-S5-27 and was greater than that of S5-27. In interacting with secretin-preferring receptors, the apparent affinity of 15-Asn-S5--27 was equal to that of S5-27 and was greater than that of 15-Lys-S5-27. In interacting with the secretin-preferring receptors each of the secretin fragments was approximately 2% as effective as secretin in causing an increase in cellular cyclic AMP. None of these fragments was able to cause a detectable increase in cyclic AMP mediated by the vasoactive intestinal peptide-preferring receptors. The dose vs. response curves for the action of secretin and vasoactive intestinal peptide on cellular cyclic AMP and on amylase secretion as well as the pattern of effects of secretin fragments on these actions indicated that the increase in amylase secretion caused by vasoactive intestinal peptide and secretin is mediated exclusively by the vasoactive intestinal peptide-preferring receptors. Furthermore, occupation of approximately 50% of the vasoactive intestinal peptide-preferring receptors is sufficient to cause maximal stimulation of amylase secretion.  相似文献   

16.
Adaptive exocrine pancreatic growth is mediated primarily by dietary protein and the gastrointestinal hormone cholecystokinin (CCK). Feeding trypsin inhibitors such as camostat (FOY-305) is known to induce CCK release and stimulate pancreatic growth. However, camostat has also been reported to stimulate secretin release and, because secretin often potentiates the action of CCK, it could participate in the growth response. Our aim was to test the role of secretin in pancreatic development and adaptive growth through the use of C57BL/6 mice with genetic deletion of secretin or secretin receptor. The lack of secretin in the intestine or the secretin receptor in the pancreas was confirmed by RT-PCR. Other related components, such as vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) receptors (VPAC(1) and VPAC(2)), were not affected. Secretin increased cAMP levels in acini from wild-type (WT) mice but had no effect on acini from secretin receptor-deleted mice, whereas VIP and forskolin still induced a normal response. Secretin in vivo failed to induce fluid secretion in receptor-deficient mice. The pancreas of secretin or secretin receptor-deficient mice was of normal size and histology, indicating that secretin is not necessary for normal pancreatic differentiation or maintenance. When WT mice were fed 0.1% camostat in powdered chow, the pancreas doubled in size in 1 wk, accompanied by parallel increases in protein and DNA. Camostat-fed littermate secretin and secretin receptor-deficient mice had similar pancreatic mass to WT mice. These results indicate that secretin is not required for normal pancreatic development or adaptive growth mediated by CCK.  相似文献   

17.
Human interdigestive intestinal motility follows a circadian rhythm with reduced nocturnal activity, but circadian pancreatic exocrine secretion is unknown. To determine whether circadian changes in interdigestive pancreatic secretion occur and are associated with motor events, pancreatic enzyme outputs, proximal jejunal motility, and plasma pancreatic polypeptide concentrations were measured during consecutive daytime and nighttime periods (12 h each) in seven healthy volunteers using orojejunal multilumen intubation. Studies were randomly started in the morning or evening. Nocturnally, motility decreased (motor quiescence: 67 +/- 22 vs. 146 +/- 37 min; motility index: 3.59 +/- 0.33 vs. 2.78 +/- 0.40 mmHg/min; both P < 0.05) but amylase output increased (273 +/- 78 vs. 384 +/- 100 U/min; P < 0.05) and protease output remained unchanged (P > 0.05); consequently, enzyme/motility ratio increased. Amylase outputs were always lowest during phase I. Motor but not pancreatic circadian activities were associated with sleep. Pancreatic polypeptide plasma concentrations were unchanged. Consequently, intestinal motor and pancreatic exocrine functions may have different circadian rhythms, i.e., decreased motor and stable secretory activity during the night. However, the association between individual phases of interdigestive motor and secretory activity is preserved. The nocturnal increase in enzyme/motility ratio is probably not caused by increased cholinergic tone.  相似文献   

18.
L Bueno  J Fioramonti 《Peptides》1986,7(1):73-77
Gastrointestinal motor activity following intracerebroventricular (ICV) and intravenous (IV) administration of corticotropin releasing factor (CRF), corticotropin (ACTH) and cortisol was investigated in fasted dogs with strain-gauge transducers chronically implanted on the antrum and proximal jejunum. ICV but not IV administration of CRF (20 to 100 ng/kg) suppressed the gastric cyclic migrating motor complex (MMC) for 3 to 6 hours without affecting the jejunum. Similar disruptive effects on the gastric MMC were observed after ICV administration of ACTH (0.5 U/kg) or cortisol (0.1 micrograms/kg) but not after IV administration of 10 times higher doses. These results suggest that in dog CRF may be involved in the central control of the interdigestive gastric motility, these effects were not probably due to the release of ACTH and cortisol the other hormones of the pituitary adrenocortical system change the gastric motility when centrally administered through a possible feed-back mechanism affecting brain CRF level.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of neural blockers on the pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to an intraluminal infusion of soybean trypsin inhibitor and HCl were investigated. The stimulation of pancreatic enzyme secretion upon the intraluminal infusion of soybean trypsin inhibitor was not blocked by atropine, but was completely blocked by guanethidine. The intraluminal infusion of 0.08 n HCl, which is known as a potent secretagogue of secretin, caused a rapid augmentation of trypsin output, which was not blocked by atropine or guanethidine. Preinjection of CR-1392 (1.5 mg/kg, i.p.), which is a strong cholecystokinin receptor antagonist, completely blocked the pancreatic response to soybean trypsin inhibitor, but not that to 0.08 n HCl. This inferred that guanethidine specifically suppressed the CCK-release from the small intestine.

These findings suggest that the pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to soybean trypsin inhibitor is mainly mediated by CCK, and that adrenergic modulation would be involved in the CCK-mediated pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to soybean trypsin inhibitor.  相似文献   

20.
The stimulation of exocrine pancreatic secretion that has been attributed by Pavlov exclusively to various reflexes (nervism), was then found that it depend also on numerous enterohormones, especially cholecystokinin (CCK) and secretin, released by duodeno-jejunal mucosa and originally believed to act via an endocrine pathway. Recently, CCK and other enterohormones were found to stimulate the pancreas by excitation of sensory nerves and triggering vago-vagal and entero-pancreatic reflexes. Numerous neurotransmitters and neuropeptides released by enteric nervous system (ENS) of gut and pancreas have been also implicated in the regulation of exocrine pancreas. This article was designed to review the contribution of vagal nerves and entero-hormones, especially CCK and other enterohormones, involved in the control of appetitive behavior such as leptin and ghrelin and pancreatic polypeptide family (peptide YY and neuropeptide Y). Basal secretion shows periodic fluctuations with peals controlled by ENS and by motilin and Ach. Plasma ghrelin, that is considered as hunger hormone, increases under basal conditions, while plasma leptin falls to the lowest level. Postprandial pancreatic secretion, classically divided into cephalic, gastric and intestinal phases, involves predominantly CCK, which under physiological conditions acts almost entirely by activation of vago-vagal reflexes to stimulate the exocrine pancreas, being accompanied by the fall in plasma ghrelin and increase of plasma leptin, reflecting feeding behavior. We conclude that the major role in postprandial pancreatic secretion is played by vagus and gastrin in cephalic and gastric phases and by vagus in conjunction with CCK and secretin in intestinal phase. PP, PYY somatostatin, leptin and ghrelin that affect food intake appear to participate in the feedback control of postprandial pancreatic secretion via hypothalamic centers.  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