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1.
We previously reported the stimulatory effect of endogenous nitric oxide (NO) on gastric acid secretion in the isolated mouse whole stomach and histamine release from gastric histamine-containing cells. In the present study, we investigated the effects of endogenous and exogenous NO on gastric acid secretion in urethane-anesthetized rats. Acid secretion was studied in gastric-cannulated rats stimulated with several secretagogues under urethane anesthesia. The acid secretory response to the muscarinic receptor agonist bethanechol (2 mg/kg, s.c.), the cholecystokinin(2) receptor agonist pentagastrin (20 microg/kg, s.c.) or the centrally acting secretagogue 2-deoxy-D-glucose (200 mg/kg, i.v.) was dose-dependently inhibited by the NO synthase inhibitor N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA, 10 or 50 mg/kg, i.v.). This inhibitory effect of L-NNA was reversed by a substrate of NO synthase, L-arginine (200 mg/kg, i.v.), but not by D-arginine. The histamine H(2) receptor antagonist famotidine (1 mg/kg, i.v.) completely inhibited the acid secretory response to bethanechol, pentagastrin or 2-deoxy-D-glucose, showing that all of these secretagogues induced gastric acid secretion mainly through histamine release from gastric enterochromaffin-like cells (ECL cells). On the other hand, histamine (10 mg/kg, s.c.)-induced gastric acid secretion was not inhibited by pretreatment with L-NNA. The NO donor sodium nitroprusside (0.3-3 mg/kg, i.v.) also dose-dependently induced an increase in acid secretion. The sodium nitroprusside-induced gastric acid secretion was significantly inhibited by famotidine or by the soluble guanylate cyclase inhibitor methylene blue (50 mg/kg, i.v.). These results suggest that NO is involved in the gastric acid secretion mediated by histamine release from gastric ECL cells.  相似文献   

2.
We compared gastric acid secretion in response to various stimuli in normal and streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats, in an attempt to characterize the alteration of acid secretory response in diabetic conditions. Animals were injected STZ (70 mg x kg(-1), i.p.) and used after 5 weeks of diabetes with blood glucose > 350 mg x dL(-1). Under urethane anesthesia, a rat stomach was mounted on an ex vivo chamber, perfused with saline and acid secretion was measured at pH 7.0 using a pH-stat method and by adding 100 mM NaOH. The acid secretion was stimulated by i.v. infusion of either histamine (4 mg x kg(-1) x h(-1)), pentagastrin (60 microg x kg(-1) x h(-1)) or carbachol (20 microg x kg(-1) x h(-1)) or i.v. injection of YM-14673 (0.3 mg x kg(-1)), an analog of thyrotropin-releasing hormone, or vagal electrical stimulation (2 ms, 3 Hz, 0.5 mA). In normal rats, gastric acid secretion was increased in response to either histamine, pentagastrin, carbachol, YM-14673 or electrical vagal stimulation. In STZ diabetic rats, however, changes in acid secretion varied depending on the stimuli; the acid secretory responses to histamine remained unchanged, those to YM-14673 and vagal electrical stimulation significantly decreased, but the responses to both pentagastrin and carbachol were significantly enhanced as compared to normal rats. Luminal release of histamine in response to both pentagastrin and carbachol was increased in STZ-diabetic rats as compared to normal animals. The altered acid secretory responses in STZ diabetic rats were partially reversed by daily injection of insulin with amelioration of high blood glucose levels. These results suggest that STZ-diabetic rats showed different changes in gastric acid secretory responses to various stimuli; no change in response to histamine, a decrease to both YM-14673 and vagal electrical stimulation and an increase to both pentagastrin and carbachol. The increased acid secretory response may be associated with an enhanced release of mucosal histamine, while the decreased response may be due to vagal neuropathy.  相似文献   

3.
We examined the role of prostaglandin E (EP) receptor subtypes in the regulation of gastric acid secretion in the rat. Under urethane anesthesia, the stomach was superfused with saline, and the acid secretion was determined at pH 7.0 by adding 50 mM NaOH. The acid secretion was stimulated by intravenous infusion of histamine or pentagastrin. Various EP agonists were administered intravenously, whereas EP antagonists were given subcutaneously 30 min or intravenously 10 min before EP agonists. PGE(2) suppressed the acid secretion stimulated by either histamine or pentagastrin in a dose-dependent manner. The acid inhibitory effect of PGE(2) was mimicked by sulprostone (EP(1)/EP(3) agonist) but not butaprost (EP(2) agonist) or AE1-329 (EP(4) agonist). The inhibitory effect of sulprostone, which was not affected by ONO-8711 (EP(1) antagonist), was more potent against pentagastrin- (50% inhibition dose: 3.6 mug/kg) than histamine-stimulated acid secretion (50% inhibition dose: 18.0 mug/kg). Pentagastrin increased the luminal release of histamine, and this response was also inhibited by sulprostone. On the other hand, AE1-329 (EP(4) agonist) stimulated the acid secretion in vagotomized animals with a significant increase in luminal histamine. This effect of AE1-329 was totally abolished by cimetidine as well as AE3-208 (EP(4) antagonist). These results suggest that PGE(2) has a dual effect on acid secretion: inhibition mediated by EP(3) receptors and stimulation through EP(4) receptors. The former effect may be brought about by suppression at both parietal and enterochromaffin-like cells, whereas the latter effect may be mediated by histamine released from enterochromaffin-like cells.  相似文献   

4.
The aquaporin-4 (AQP4) water channel has been proposed to play a role in gastric acid secretion. Immunocytochemistry using anti-AQP4 antibodies showed strong AQP4 protein expression at the basolateral membrane of gastric parietal cells in wild-type (+/+) mice. AQP4 involvement in gastric acid secretion was studied using transgenic null (-/-) mice deficient in AQP4 protein. -/- Mice had grossly normal growth and appearance and showed no differences in gastric morphology by light microscopy. Gastric acid secretion was measured in anesthetized mice in which the stomach was luminally perfused (0. 3 ml/min) with 0.9% NaCl containing [(14)C]polyethylene glycol ([(14)C]PEG) as a volume marker. Collected effluent was assayed for titratable acid content and [(14)C]PEG radioactivity. After 45-min baseline perfusion, acid secretion was stimulated by pentagastrin (200 microg. kg(-1). h(-1) iv) for 1 h or histamine (0.23 mg/kg iv) + intraluminal carbachol (20 mg/l). Baseline gastric acid secretion (means +/- SE, n = 25) was 0.06 +/- 0.03 and 0.03 +/- 0.02 microeq/15 min in +/+ and -/- mice, respectively. Pentagastrin-stimulated acid secretion was 0.59 +/- 0.14 and 0.70 +/- 0.15 microeq/15 min in +/+ and -/- mice, respectively. Histamine plus carbachol-stimulated acid secretion was 7.0 +/- 1.9 and 8.0 +/- 1.8 microeq/15 min in +/+ and -/- mice, respectively. In addition, AQP4 deletion did not affect gastric fluid secretion, gastric pH, or fasting serum gastrin concentrations. These results provide direct evidence against a role of AQP4 in gastric acid secretion.  相似文献   

5.
Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors play an important role in the regulation of gastric acid secretion stimulated by acetylcholine; nonetheless, the precise role of each receptor subtype (M(1)-M(5)) remains unclear. This study examined the involvement of M(1), M(3), and M(5) receptors in cholinergic regulation of acid secretion using muscarinic receptor knockout (KO) mice. Gastric acid secretion was measured in both mice subjected to acute gastric fistula production under urethane anesthesia and conscious mice that had previously undergone pylorus ligation. M(3) KO mice exhibited impaired gastric acid secretion in response to carbachol. Unexpectedly, M(1) KO mice exhibited normal intragastric pH, serum gastrin and mucosal histamine levels, and gastric acid secretion stimulated by carbachol, histamine, and gastrin. Pirenzepine, known as an M(1)-receptor antagonist, inhibited carbachol-stimulated gastric acid secretion in a dose-dependent manner in M(1) KO mice as well as in wild-type (WT) mice, suggesting that the inhibitory effect of pirenzepine on gastric acid secretion is independent of M(1)-receptor antagonism. Notably, M(5) KO mice exhibited both significantly lower carbachol-stimulated gastric acid secretion and histamine-secretory responses to carbachol compared with WT mice. RT-PCR analysis revealed M(5)-mRNA expression in the stomach, but not in either the fundic or antral mucosa. Consequently, cholinergic stimulation of gastric acid secretion is clearly mediated by M(3) (on parietal cells) and M(5) receptors (conceivably in the submucosal plexus), but not M(1) receptors.  相似文献   

6.
The inhibitory action on somatostatin (ST) on the spontaneous and stimulated (pentagastrin 18 micrograms/kg/h i.v. and histamine 5 mg/kg/h i.v.) gastric acid secretion and its modification after pretreatment with an inhibitor of endogenous prostaglandins biosynthesis (indomethacin 5 mg/kg i.v.) has been studied in the anaesthetized rat. ST 30 micrograms/kg/h i.v. inhibits basal and stimulated gastric acid secretion. In the presence of indomethacin the inhibition elicited by ST on basal and pentagastrin induced gastric acid secretion was partially attenuated, whereas in the histamine group the inhibitory action was totally abolished. The antagonism elicited by indomethacin was not surmounted by increasing (X 3.3) the dose of ST. These findings suggest that endogenous prostaglandins may be involved in the mechanism by which ST exerts its antisecretory effect in this model.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of the capsaicin analogue ‘resiniferatoxin’ (RTX) was studied on basal and stimulated gastric acid secretory responses following sc bethanechol (1.5 mg/kg), sc pentagastrin (50 μg/kg) and sc histamine (0.5 and 2.5 mg/kg) in the 1-h pylorusligated plus saline (2 ml ig)-treated rats. Resiniferatoxin applied intragastrically in doses of 0.6 and 1 μg/kg at time of pylorus-ligation and administration of the above secretagogues reduced acid secretory respones to bethanechol by 18.3 and 26.4%, to 0.5 mg/kg histamine by 39.9 and 44.6%, to 2.5 mg/kg histamine by 21.3 and 40.8% and to pentagastrin by 10.2 and 30.9% respectively. A single sc injection of 0.4 μg/kg of RTX abolished basal secretion in pylorus ligated rats (which did not receive ig saline). Our results indicate that locally applied RTX is capable of inhibiting basal secretory responses and modifying gastric acid responses stimulated with histamine, bethanechol or pentagastrin in the rat.  相似文献   

8.
Motilin and ghrelin constitute a peptide family, and these hormones are important for the regulation of gastrointestinal motility. In this study, we examined the effect of motilin and ghrelin on gastric acid secretion in anesthetized suncus (house musk shrew, Suncus murinus), a ghrelin- and motilin-producing mammal. We first established a gastric lumen-perfusion system in the suncus and confirmed that intravenous (i.v.) administration of histamine (1 mg/kg body weight) stimulated acid secretion. Motilin (0.1, 1.0, and 10 μg/kg BW) stimulated the acid output in a dose-dependent manner in suncus, whereas ghrelin (0.1, 1.0, and 10 μg/kg BW) alone did not induce acid output. Furthermore, in comparison with the vehicle administration, the co-administration of low-dose (1 μg/kg BW) motilin and ghrelin significantly stimulated gastric acid secretion, whereas either motilin (1 μg/kg BW) or ghrelin (1 μg/kg BW) alone did not significantly induce gastric acid secretion. This indicates an additive role of ghrelin in motilin-induced gastric acid secretion. We then investigated the pathways of motilin/motilin and ghrelin-stimulated acid secretion using receptor antagonists. Treatment with YM 022 (a CCK-B receptor antagonist) and atropine (a muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist) had no effect on motilin or motilin-ghrelin co-administration-induced acid output. In contrast, famotidine (a histamine H2 receptor antagonist) completely inhibited motilin-stimulated acid secretion and co-administration of motilin and ghrelin induced gastric acid output. This is the first report demonstrating that motilin stimulates gastric secretion in mammals. Our results also suggest that motilin and co-administration of motilin and ghrelin stimulate gastric acid secretion via the histamine-mediated pathway in suncus.  相似文献   

9.
The influence of adenosine 5'-triphosphate on gastric acid secretion stimulated by histamine, carbachol, dibutyryl-cAMP and the phosphodiesterase inhibitors 8-phenyl-theophylline and rolipram in isolated rabbit gastric glands was studied. Changes oi gastric acid secretion were measured by the aminopyrine accumulation method. Histamine-stimulated acid secretion was significantly inhibited by ATP 1 mM, whereas the secretory responses elicited by carbachol, dibutyryl-cAMP, 8-phenyl-theophylline or rolipram were not. Assays with indomethacin, a well known prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor, showed that this agent significantly reduced the inhibitory effect of ATP on histamine responses. The results indicate that the antisecretory effect of ATP was specific for histamine and that it was mediated, at least in part, via stimulation of endogenous prostaglandin production.  相似文献   

10.
Sauvagine: effects on gastric acid secretion in rats   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
G Improta  M Broccardo 《Peptides》1988,9(4):843-846
Intracerebroventricular (ICV) and subcutaneous (SC) injections of sauvagine powerfully inhibited gastric acid secretion stimulated by gastric distension and by 2-deoxy-D-glucose, but not by histamine in pylorus-ligated rats. Naloxone failed to antagonize the antisecretory effects of SC and ICV sauvagine. Intravenous infusion of sauvagine completely suppressed bethanechol-stimulated gastric secretion, significantly decreased pentagastrin-stimulated gastric secretion and did not modify histamine-stimulated gastric secretion in gastric-perfused rats. The inhibitory effect of sauvagine on gastric secretory response is not mediated through opioid or histamine receptors. It appears to be dependent on a vagal mechanism as well as other mechanisms that await further elucidation.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of chlorpromazine on ulcer formation by indomethacin and on total gastric secretion and gastric acid secretion was studied in rats. Secretion and ulceration were evaluated under basal conditions and after the administration of histamine or insulin, i.e. substances stimulating gastric acid secretion. The authors confirmed that chlorpromazine inhibits basal secretion and found that it also inhibits histamine- and insulin-stimulated gastric secretion, in correlation to the dose. It also strongly inhibits the formation of stomach lesions caused by indomethacin under basal conditions and after pretreatment with histamine (3 and 10 mg/kg) and insulin (0.3 IU/kg). Chlorpromazine did not inhibit lesions formed after combining indomethacin with insulin in a dose of 3 IU/kg. The results show that although chlorpromazine inhibits both basal and centrally or peripherally stimulated gastric secretion, its effect on stomach lesions caused by indomethacin is not uniform. Pretreatment with insulin in a dose of 3 IU/kg demonstrates that indomethacin-induced stomach lesions are markedly potentiated by this dose of insulin and are not dependent on gastric secretion only. The inability of chlorpromazine to inhibit these lesions gives the evidence that other--probably central--mechanisms play a role in their development.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of the selective cyclo-oxygenase-type-2 (COX-2) inhibitor etodolac on gastric mucosal integrity and gastric acid secretion was investigated in the rat. Etodolac was given in doses comparable with those being used in man for therapy of rheumatic conditions. The effect of etodolac was studied in the presence of a mild barrier breaker and in the presence of increased rates of endogenous acid secretion. In conscious pylorus-ligated rats, etodolac given intragastrically in 16 or 32 mg /kg for 3 h did not by itself give rise to visible gastric mucosal injury. Etodolac, however, exacerbated gastric mucosal injury evoked by intragastric application of acidified sodium taurocholate (5 mM in 150 mM HCl) in a dose-dependent manner. This effect of edotolac was independent of changes in gastric acid secretory responses. In rats whose gastric acid secretion was stimulated by intraperitoneal histamine (5 mg/kg), and etodolac (given i.g. in doses of 16 or 32 mg/kg) also increased gastric mucosal injury caused by histamine dose-dependently in the 3-h pylorus-ligated rats. Etodolac decreased gastric mucus in the saline- and in the sodium taurocholate-treated rats. In urethane-anaesthetized acute gastric fistula rats, intragastric etodolac (32 mg/kg) did not modify basal gastric acid secretion. Our data suggest that etodolac, a selective COX-2 inhibitor, impairs gastric mucosal resistance and can exacerbate gastric mucosal injury caused by other mucosal barrier breaking agents. Cyclooxygenase type-2 thus contributes to the gastric mucosal defences.  相似文献   

13.
Ghrelin stimulates gastric acid secretion and motility in rats   总被引:49,自引:0,他引:49  
Ghrelin, a novel growth-hormone-releasing peptide, was discovered in rat and human stomach tissues. However, its physiological and pharmacological actions in the gastric function remain to be determined. Therefore, we studied the effects of rat ghrelin on gastric functions in urethane-anesthetized rats. Intravenous administrations of rat ghrelin at 0.8 to 20 microgram/kg dose-dependently increased not only gastric acid secretion measured by a lumen-perfused method, but also gastric motility measured by a miniature balloon method. The maximum response in gastric acid secretion was almost equipotent to that of histamine (3 mg/kg, i.v.). Moreover, these actions were abolished by pretreatment with either atropine (1 mg/kg, s.c.) or bilateral cervical vagotomy, but not by a histamine H(2)-receptor antagonist (famotidine, 1 mg/kg, s.c.). These results taken together suggest that ghrelin may play a physiological role in the vagal control of gastric function in rats.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of bombesin (BBS) infusion or BBS injection on the plateau gastric secretion stimulated by pentagastrin (Pg) were compared in cats fitted with gastric fistula (GF) and Heidenhain pouch (HP). Injection of 81 pmol/kg of BBS inhibited Pg-stimulated acid secretion in both GF and HP by 47 +/- 5% and 37 +/- 5% (P less than 0.01), respectively. Infusion of 324 pmol/kg.h of BBS did not significantly modify acid secretion, but as soon as the infusion stopped, an inhibition appeared which lasted 1 h (37 +/- 5% in GF and 53 +/- 4% in HP P less than 0.01). The inhibition was reversed in GF by infusion of BBS 324 pmol/kg.h. In HP, reversion of inhibition required the addition in the Pg infusion of subthreshold dose of carbachol. We suggest that under non-steady state conditions (i.e. injection or after the end of the infusion) a concentration gradient of BBS is created which favors the response of D-cells over that of G-cells, whereas under steady-state conditions (i.e. during infusion) the effects of BBS on G- and D-cells are balanced. This finding argues for a physiological role of BBS in the regulation of gastric acid secretion.  相似文献   

15.
第三脑室注射组胺及其受体激动剂对五肽促胃液素诱导...   总被引:7,自引:4,他引:3  
王竹立  卢光启 《生理学报》1992,44(3):261-268
The present study shows the dual effects of intraventricularly injected histamine (0.25-2.0 micrograms/5 microliters) on pentagastrin-induced gastric acid secretion. Male Wistar rats weighing 200-300 g were anesthetized with intraperitoneal sodium pentobarbital. Gastric acid was continuously washed out with 37 degrees C saline solution by means of a perfusion pump. On the background of continuous intravenous infusion of pentagastrin [7.5 micrograms/(kg.h),] histamine (0.25 microgram/5 microliters) or 2-pyridylethylamine (PEA, 10 micrograms/5 microliters), a H1-receptor agonist, was injected into the third ventricle through a chronically implanted canula. The acid output decreased 10 min after injection and did not recover at 90 min. When the dose of histamine was increased to 1.0 micrograms or 2.0 micrograms, dual effects appeared. The acid output decreased respectively in 73% or 50% of the animals, while in the rest 27% and 50% of the animals, the acid output increased. H2-receptor agonist dimaprit (10 micrograms/5 microliters, i.c.v.) or impromidine (0.1 micrograms/5 microliters, i.c.v.) had no pronounced effect on pentagastrin-induced acid secretion. Pretreatment with diphenhydramine (16 micrograms/0.2 ml or 32 micrograms/0.2 ml, i.m.) abolished the inhibitory effect of histamine and PEA on acid secretion. These results suggest that histamine may be involved in the central regulation of gastric acid secretion, and the inhibitory effect may be mediated by H1-receptors in the brain. The mechanism underlying the production of the dual effects of histamine is unknown.  相似文献   

16.
N alpha-methylhistamine (N alpha-MH) is one of an unusual metabolite of histamine that was found in Helicobacter pylori-infected stomachs and is believed to interact with specific histamine H(1), H(2) and H(3)-receptors to stimulate gastric acid secretion and gastrin release from isolated G-cells but the effects of N alpha-MH on gastric mucosal integrity have been little studied. This study was designed; (1) to compare the effect of exogenous N alpha-MH with that of standard histamine on gastric secretion and plasma gastrin levels in rats equipped with gastric fistula (series A); and (2) to assess the action of N alpha-MH on gastric lesions induced by 100% ethanol (series B) in rats with or without removal of antral portion of the stomach (antrectomy). Rats of series B were pretreated intragastrically (i.g.) or intraperitoneally (i.p.) with N alpha-MH or histamine (0.1-2 mg/kg) 30 min prior to 100% ethanol (1.5 ml, i.g.) with or without: (1) vehicle (saline); (2) RPR 102681 (30 mg/kg i.p.), to block CCK-B/gastrin receptors; and (3) ranitidine (40 mg/kg s.c.) to inhibit histamine H(2)-receptors. The area of gastric lesions was determined planimetrically, gastric blood flow (GBF) was assessed by H(2)-gas clearance method and venous blood was collected for determination of plasma gastrin levels by radioimmunoassay (RIA). N alpha-MH and histamine dose-dependently increased gastric acid output (series A); the dose increasing this secretion by 50% (ED(50)) being 2 and 5 mg/kg i.g or i.p., respectively, and this effect was accompanied by a significant rise in plasma gastrin levels. Both, N alpha-MH and histamine attenuated dose-dependently the area of gastric lesions induced by 100% ethanol (series B) while producing significant rise in the GBF and plasma immunoreactive gastrin increments. These secretory, protective, hipergastrinemic and hyperemic effects of N alpha-MH and histamine were completely abolished by antrectomy, whereas pretreatment with RPR 102681 attenuated significantly the N alpha-MH and histamine-induced protection against ethanol damage and accompanying hyperemia. Ranitidine, that produced achlorhydria and a further increase in plasma gastrin levels, failed to influence the N alpha-MH- and histamine-induced protection and accompanying rise in the GBF. We conclude that (1) N alpha-MH stimulates gastric acid secretion and exhibit gastroprotective activity against acid-independent noxious agents in the manner similar to that afforded by histamine; and (2) this protection involves an enhancement in the gastric microcirculation and release of gastrin acting via specific CCK-B/gastrin receptors but unexpectedly, appears to be unrelated to histamine H(2)-receptors.  相似文献   

17.
This study aims to explore the influences of Paraoxonase‐1 (PON1) involved in airway inflammation and remodeling in asthma. Mice were divided into control, asthma, asthma + PON1 and asthma + NC groups, and asthma models were established via aerosol inhalation of ovalbumin (OVA). HE, Masson, and PAS stains were used to observe airway inflammation and remodeling, Giemsa staining to assess inflammatory cells in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), qRT‐PCR and Western blot to detect PON1 expression, lipid peroxidation and glutathione assays to quantify malondialdehyde (MDA) activity and glutathione peroxidase (GSH) levels, ELISA to determine inflammatory cytokines and immunoglobulin, and colorimetry to detect PON1 activities. Additionally, mice lung macrophages and fibroblasts were transfected with PON1 plasmid in vitro; ELISA and qRT‐PCR were performed to understand the effects of PON1 on inflammatory cytokines secreted by lung macrophages, MTT assay for lung fibroblasts proliferation and qRT‐PCR and Western blot for the expressions of PON1, COL1A1, and fibronectin. After overexpression of PON1, the asthma mice had decreased inflammatory cell infiltration, fibrosis degree, and airway wall thickness; inflammatory cells and inflammatory cytokines in BALF were also reduced, expressions of OVA‐IgE and IgG1, and MDA activity were decreased, but the expressions of OVA‐IgG2a and INF‐γ and GSH levels were increased. Besides, PON1 significantly inhibited microphage expression of LPS‐induced inflammatory cytokines, lung fibroblast proliferation, and COL1A1 and fibronectin expression. Thus, PON1 could relieve airway inflammation and airway remodeling in asthmatic mice and inhibit the secretion of LPS‐induced macrophage inflammatory cytokines and the proliferation of lung fibroblasts.  相似文献   

18.
Acid secretory activity and respiration in rabbit gastric glands are stimulated by cAMP-dependent and -independent agonists. Potentiation between agonists suggests interaction of the activation pathways. Regulation of secretory response by protein kinase C was investigated with 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA). TPA elevated basal respiration, pepsin release, and acid secretion but inhibited histamine and carbachol stimulation of acid secretion by gastric glands, as measured by [dimethylamino-14C]aminopyrine accumulation. The inhibition of histamine response was specific for protein kinase C activators, occurred after a 20-min lag, and was not reversed by removal of TPA after 3 min of preincubation. TPA pretreatment inhibited acid secretory responses to cholera toxin and forskolin but enhanced the response to cAMP analogues. Cholera toxin and pertussis toxin simulated ADP-ribosylation of 45 and 41 kDa proteins, respectively, in parietal cell membranes. Therefore, both stimulatory (Gs) and inhibitory (Gi) GTP binding proteins of adenylyl cyclase appear to be present in parietal cells. Pretreatment with pertussis toxin attenuated PGE2 but not TPA inhibition of histamine stimulation of aminopyrine accumulation. Thus, the inhibitory effect of TPA does not appear to be associated with an action on Gi. The results with histamine and carbachol suggest that protein kinase C may regulate both cAMP-dependent and -independent stimulation of parietal cell acid secretion.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of epidermal growth factor (EGF) on gastric acid secretion was correlated with the morphological changes of the apical pole of rat parietal cells studied by transmission electron microscopy. Gastric acid secretion was stimulated by histamine, carbachol, pentagastrin, and insulin-induced hypoglycemia, and estimated by continuous recording of pH variations of gastric luminal perfusate. EGF inhibits acid secretion in these conditions. The action of the hormone also results in the arrest or reversal of the changes in shape undergone by parietal cells as they go into secretion. In view of the evidence involving cytoskeletal elements in the generation of these structural alterations, our observations suggest that the action of EGF on gastric acid secretion may be a consequence of a general effect of this hormone on cytoskeletal function.  相似文献   

20.
The diterpene, forskolin, direct activator of the catalytic subunit of the adenylate cyclase from various tissues, also stimulates gastric acid secretion: in vitro, with an isolated parietal cell preparation, forskolin dose-dependently stimulated acid secretion (EC50: 1 microM) (measured by accumulation in the acidic spaces of the weak base [14C]-aminopyrine) and the maximal acid secretory value at 0.1 mM was 4 times higher than that obtained with histamine. Forskolin dramatically increased the production of intracellular cyclic-AMP at a level 4 times higher than that obtained with histamine at the same concentration. In vivo, gastric acid secretion of the rat is dose-dependently increased. The doses required to get a significant response (100 nmol/kg) were 1,000 times higher than those required for gastrin and 100 times lower than those for histamine, but the same maximal value was obtained. Cimetidine did not significantly modified this response. These results demonstrate that, both in vitro and in vivo, forskolin is a potent stimulant for gastric acid secretion.  相似文献   

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