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1.
The effect of galanin on pancreatic hormone release was studied using isolated perifused rat pancreatic islets. In the presence of 100 mg/dl glucose, 10(-8) mol/L galanin significantly inhibited the basal somatostatin release compared with the perifusion without galanin, whereas there was no significant change in the basal insulin and glucagon release. However, under stimulation of 20 mmol/L arginine, 10(-8) mol/L galanin significantly enhanced glucagon release and suppressed insulin and somatostatin release. These effects disappeared immediately after cessation of galanin infusion. Additionally, 10(-8) mol/L galanin significantly enhanced the first and second phase of glucagon release stimulated by arginine, whereas arginine-stimulated insulin and somatostatin releases were significantly inhibited in both phases. In the cysteamine-treated rat islets, neither enhancement of glucagon release nor suppression of insulin release by galanin was reproducible. These findings indicate two possible explanations. First, it is suggested that the effects of galanin on insulin and glucagon release may be direct and reversed by non-specific effect of cycteamine. Secondly, it seems likely that galanin-enhanced glucagon release may be indirect and in part due to the concomitant somatostatin suppression. Galanin may have an important regulatory function on endocrine pancreas.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the effect of rat leptin as well as the 22-56 fragment of this molecule on pancreatic hormone secretion in the perfused rat pancreas. In pancreases from fed rats, leptin failed to alter the insulin secretion elicited by glucose, arginine or tolbutamide, but inhibited the insulin response to both CCK-8 and carbachol, secretagogues known to act on the B-cell by increasing phospholipid turnover. This insulinostatic effect was also observed with the 22-56 leptin fragment. In pancreases obtained from 24-hour fasted rats, no effect of leptin on carbachol-induced insulin output was found, perhaps as a consequence of depressed B-cell phospholipid metabolism. Leptin did not influence glucagon or somatostatin release. Our results do not support the concept of leptin as a major regulator of B-cell function. Leptin inhibition of carbachol-induced insulin output might reflect a restraining effect of this peptide on the cholinergic stimulation of insulin release.  相似文献   

3.
Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a 37-amino acid peptide that is present in peripheral cells of islets and in nerves around and within islets. CGRP can inhibit insulin secretion in vitro and in vivo. Whether the inhibitory action of CGRP is mediated by somatostatin or by nerve terminals is, however, not known. The objective of this study was to examine the effect of CGRP on insulin secretion, using cultured newborn and adult rat islet cells which did not contain nerve terminals. In adult rat islet cells, CGRP (10(-10) to 10(-8) M) significantly inhibited glucose-stimulated and gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP)-potentiated insulin secretion, but in newborn rat islet cells, CGRP did not inhibit glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Inhibition of glucose-stimulated and GIP-potentiated insulin release was dependent on the glucose concentration during the prestimulation period. CGRP did not stimulate release of somatostatin. These findings suggest that rat CGRP can act directly on beta-cells through a specific receptor that is absent in newborn rat beta-cells.  相似文献   

4.
26RFa is a novel orexigenic neuropeptide identified as the endogenous ligand of the orphan G protein-coupled receptor GPR103. GPR103 shares sequence identity with the receptors for neuropeptide-Y and galanin, two peptides known to inhibit insulin secretion. We have investigated the effect of 26RFa on insulin and glucagon secretion in the perfused rat pancreas. 26RFa dose-dependently reduced glucose-induced insulin release, inhibited the insulin responses to both arginine and exendin-4 and did not affect glucagon output. The inhibitory effect of 26RFa on exendin-4-induced insulin secretion was not observed in pancreata from pertussis toxin-treated rats, thus suggesting that 26RFa may inhibit insulin secretion, at least in part, via a pertussis toxin-sensitive G(i) protein coupled to the adenylyl cyclase system.  相似文献   

5.
While alloxan treatment stimulated insulin secretion, alloxan pretreatment reduced arginine and glucose-induced insulin secretion in the isolated perfused rat pancreas. The transient insulin secretion by alloxan was inhibited by 3-O-methylglucose and somatostatin. Diminished insulin response to arginine and glucose induced by pretreatment with alloxan was restored by the addition of 3-O-methylglucose, whereas the addition of somatostatin did not improve the impaired insulin secretion. These results indicate that alloxan induced insulin secretion is not due to an uncontrolled leakage, but that the stimulatory and inhibitory action of alloxan on insulin secretion might be initiated by the binding of alloxan to the hexose transport site.  相似文献   

6.
We have investigated the effect of a high concentration (750 nM) of synthetic amidated rat amylin on unstimulated somatostatin and insulin secretion as well as on the response of these hormones to arginine. Amylin consistently reduced insulin output but it did not significantly modify somatostatin release. These findings indicate that the inhibitory effect of amylin on insulin secretion is not mediated by a D-cell paracrine effect.  相似文献   

7.
This study examined the effects of exogenous somatostatin and insulin on the release of islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP), or amylin, from the isolated perfused rat pancreas. Somatostatin inhibited the release of both amylin and insulin from the perfused pancreas to the same extent. The infusion of 10 nM somatostatin resulted in 40% inhibition of the secretion of both amylin and insulin induced by 11.1 mM glucose and 10 mM arginine, and this inhibition was significantly increased to 70% by the infusion of 100 nM somatostatin (p less than 0.05). The amylin/insulin molar ratios remained constant at 0.8% and were not changed by the infusion of somatostatin. On the other hand exogenous insulin at a concentration of 1.8 nM did not affect the release of amylin induced by 11.1 mM glucose and 10 mM arginine, whereas 180 nM insulin slightly, although not significantly, inhibited the release of amylin by 15%. These findings suggest that the release of amylin may be negatively regulated by somatostatin and that circulating insulin may have no direct effect on the release of amylin at least at a physiological concentration.  相似文献   

8.
In order to elucidate the effect of glucagon antiserum on the endocrine pancreas, the release of somatostatin, glucagon, and insulin from the isolated perfused rat pancreas was studied following the infusion of arginine both with and without pretreatment by glucagon antiserum. Various concentrations of arginine in the presence of 5.5 mM glucose stimulated both somatostatin and glucagon secretion. However, the responses of somatostatin and glucagon were different at different doses of arginine. The infusion of glucagon antiserum strongly stimulated basal secretion in the perfusate total glucagon (free + antibody bound glucagon) and also enhanced its response to arginine, but free glucagon was undetectable in the perfusate during the infusion. On the other hand, the glucagon antiserum had no significant effect on either insulin or somatostatin secretion. Moreover, electron microscopic study revealed degrannulation and vacuolization in the cytoplasm of the A cells after exposure to glucagon antiserum, suggesting a hypersecretion of glucagon, but no significant change was found in the B cells or the D cells. We conclude that in a single pass perfusion system glucagon antiserum does not affect somatostatin or insulin secretion, although it enhances glucagon secretion.  相似文献   

9.
Galanin is a neurotransmitter peptide that suppresses insulin secretion. The present study aimed at investigating how a non-peptide galanin receptor agonist, galnon, affects insulin secretion from isolated pancreatic islets of healthy Wistar and diabetic Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rats. Galnon stimulated insulin release potently in isolated Wistar rat islets; 100 microM of the compound increased the release 8.5 times (p<0.001) at 3.3 mM and 3.7 times (p<0.001) at 16.7 mM glucose. Also in islet perifusions, galnon augmented several-fold both acute and late phases of insulin response to glucose. Furthermore, galnon stimulated insulin release in GK rat islets. These effects were not inhibited by the presence of galanin or the galanin receptor antagonist M35. The stimulatory effects of galnon were partly inhibited by the PKA and PKC inhibitors, H-89 and calphostin C, respectively, at 16.7 but not 3.3 mM glucose. In both Wistar and GK rat islets, insulin release was stimulated by depolarization of 30 mM KCl, and 100 microM galnon further enhanced insulin release 1.5-2 times (p<0.05). Cytosolic calcium levels, determined by fura-2, were increased in parallel with insulin release, and the L-type Ca2+-channel blocker nimodipine suppressed insulin response to glucose and galnon. In conclusion, galnon stimulates insulin release in islets of healthy rats and diabetic GK rats. The mechanism of this stimulatory effect does not involve galanin receptors. Galnon-induced insulin release is not glucose-dependent and appears to involve opening of L-type Ca2+-channels, but the main effect of galnon seems to be exerted at a step distal to these channels, i.e., at B-cell exocytosis.  相似文献   

10.
The present study was designed to determine the effects of intravenously administered galanin or gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) on glucose- and/or glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GIP)-stimulated insulin release in the anaesthetized rat. Galanin inhibited glucose-stimulated insulin responses in a dose-related manner. Galanin also inhibited insulin release in response to glucose administered with GIP; this effect was due largely to inhibition of the glucose-stimulated component since galanin did not inhibit GIP-stimulated insulin release. Galanin also inhibited insulin responses to ingestion of a mixed meal. GRP inhibited glucose-stimulated insulin responses, and the insulin responses to glucose plus GIP; unlike galanin, GRP inhibited both glucose- and GIP-stimulated insulin release. GRP also inhibited insulin release following ingestion of a mixed meal. The results suggest a possible modulatory role for these neuropeptides in regulation of insulin secretion.  相似文献   

11.
Pancreastatin is a novel peptide, isolated from porcine pancreatic extracts, which has been shown to inhibit glucose-induced insulin release "in vitro". To achieve further insight into the influence of pancreastatin on pancreatic hormone secretion, we have studied the effects of this peptide on unstimulated insulin, glucagon and somatostatin output, as well as on the responses of these hormones to glucose and to tolbutamide in the perfused rat pancreas. Pancreastatin strongly inhibited unstimulated insulin release as well as the insulin responses to glucose and to tolbutamide. It did not significantly affect glucagon or somatostatin output under any of the above-mentioned conditions. These findings suggest that pancreastatin inhibits B-cell secretory activity directly, and not through an A-cell or D-cell paracrine effect.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies have suggested that somatostatin inhibits pancreatic secretion at a central vagal site, and the dorsal vagal complex (DVC) is involved in central feedback inhibition of the exocrine pancreas. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of exogenous somatostatin in the DVC on pancreatic secretion and the somatostatin receptor subtype(s) responsible for the effect. The effects of somatostatin microinjected into the DVC on pancreatic secretion stimulated by cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8) or 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2-DG) were examined in anesthetized rats. To investigate the somatostatin inhibitory action site, a somatostatin receptor antagonist [SRA; cyclo(7-aminoheptanoyl-Phe-d-Trp-Lys-Thr)] was microinjected into the DVC before intravenous infusion of somatostatin and CCK-8/2-DG. The effects of injection of a somatostatin receptor-2 agonist (seglitide) and combined injection of somatostatin and a somatostatin receptor-2 antagonist (CYN 154806) in the DVC on the pancreatic secretion were also investigated. Somatostatin injected into the DVC significantly inhibited pancreatic secretion evoked by CCK-8 or 2-DG in a dose-dependent manner. SRA injected into the DVC completely reversed the inhibitory effect of intravenous administration of somatostatin. Seglitide injected into the DVC also inhibited CCK-8/2-DG-induced pancreatic protein secretion. However, combined injection of somatostatin and CYN 154806 did not affect the CCK-8/2-DG-induced pancreatic secretion. Somatostatin in the DVC inhibits pancreatic secretion via somatostatin receptor-2, and the DVC is the action site of somatostatin for its inhibitory effect.  相似文献   

13.
S Lindskog  B Ahrén 《Hormone research》1988,29(5-6):237-240
The effects of the two intrapancreatic peptides galanin and pancreastatin on basal and stimulated insulin and glucagon secretion in the mouse were compared. It was found that at 2 min after intravenous injection of galanin or pancreastatin (4.0 nmol/kg), basal plasma glucagon and glucose levels were slightly elevated. Galanin was more potent than pancreastatin to elevate basal plasma glucagon levels: they increased from 60 +/- 15 to 145 +/- 19 pg/ml (p less than 0.01) after galanin compared to from 35 +/- 5 to 55 +/- 8 pg/ml (p less than 0.05) after pancreastatin. Plasma insulin levels were lowered by galanin (p less than 0.05), but not by pancreastatin. CCK-8 (6.3 nmol/kg) or terbutaline (3.6 mumol/kg) markedly increased the plasma insulin levels. Galanin (4.0 nmol/kg) completely abolished the insulin response to CCK-8 (p less than 0.001), but pancreastatin (4.0 nmol/kg) was without effect. Galanin inhibited the insulin response to terbutaline by approximately 60% (p less than 0.01), but pancreastatin inhibited the insulin response to terbutaline by approximately 35% only (p less than 0.05). CCK-8 and terbutaline did both elevate plasma glucagon levels by moderate potencies: neither pancreastatin nor galanin could affect these responses. Thus, in the mouse, galanin and pancreastatin both inhibit basal and stimulated insulin secretion, and stimulate basal glucagon secretion. Galanin is thereby more potent than pancreastatin. The study also showed that galanin potently inhibits insulin secretion stimulated by the octapeptide of cholecystokin and by the beta 2-adrenoceptor agonist terbutaline, and that pancreastatin inhibits terbutaline-induced insulin secretion.  相似文献   

14.
Galanin has been shown to be present in the gastrointestinal tract, pancreas and CNS. In the rat stomach, immunohistochemical studies have revealed the presence of galanin in the intrinsic nervous system suggesting a function as putative neurotransmitter or neuromodulator which could affect neighbouring exo- or endocrine cells. Therefore this study was performed to determine the effect of galanin on the secretion of gastrin and somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI) from the isolated perfused rat stomach. The stomach was perfused via the celiac artery and the venous effluent was collected from the portal vein. The luminal content was kept at pH 2 or 7 Galanin at a concentration of 10(-10), 10(-9) and 10(-8) M inhibited basal gastrin release by 60-70% (60-100 pg/min; p less than 0.05) at luminal pH 7. At luminal pH 2 higher concentrations of galanin (10(-9) and 10(-8) M) decreased basal gastrin secretion by 60-70% (60-100 pg/min; p less than 0.05). This inhibitory effect was also present during infusion of neuromedin-C, a mammalian bombesin-like peptide that stimulates gastrin release. SLI secretion remained unchanged during galanin administration. The inhibitory action of galanin on gastrin secretion was also present during the infusion of tetrodotoxin suggesting that this effect is not mediated via neural pathways. The present data demonstrate that galanin is an inhibitor of basal and stimulated gastrin secretion and has to be considered as an inhibitory neurotransmitter which could participate in the regulation of gastric G-cell function.  相似文献   

15.
The isolated perfused rat pancreas with duodenal exclusion was used to study the stimulation of glucose-induced insulin release in response to chicken and porcine vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). The insulin response to 5.5 or 16.7 mM glucose was markedly enhanced by 750 pM porcine VIP and a concentration of 250 pM was still effective. At 250 pM, chicken VIp exhibited a slightly higher potency than porcine VIP at both glucose concentrations. The main difference between the two peptides was that the effect of porcine VIP disappeared immediately after the peptide suppression but tha of chicken VIP persisted for an additional period of 8-10 min. Somatostatin (10 ng/ml) blocked the stimulatory effect of both VIP molecules on glucose-induced insulin secretion. After suppression of VIP and somatostatin from the perfusion medium, insulin release increased to levels higher than those with glucose alone in the case of the avian peptide, but not in that porcine VIP. The data are consistent with previous results in the literature on stimulation of exocrine pancreas secretion and interaction with intestinal epithelium.  相似文献   

16.
Cells derived from rat islet tumor and grown in culture (parent cells-RIN-m) and two clones obtained from them were used to study the effect of various secretagogues on insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin secretion. Parent cells secreted all three hormones in various quantities, while clone 5F secreted predominantly insulin and clone 14B secreted predominantly somatostatin. The secretory behavior of these cells were compared to each other and to that of normal islets. In general, as in the case of normal islets, insulin secretion was stimulated by calcium, potassium, tolbutamide, theophylline, and glucagon. It was inhibited by somatostatin. Glucagon secretion was stimulated by calcium, arginine, and theophylline. Somatostatin secretion was stimulated in clone 14B by arginine, tolbutamide, theophylline, and insulin. These cells differ from normal islets, in that they do not respond to glucose or arginine with increased insulin secretion. Also somatostatin failed to inhibit glucagon secretion. The similarity in insulin secretory responses of parent cells and clone 5F suggests that local or paracrine islet hormone secretion plays only a negligible role in the control of other hormone secretion in these cells.  相似文献   

17.
Ghrelin release in man depends on the macronutrient composition of the test meal. The mechanisms contributing to the differential regulation are largely unknown. To elucidate their potential role, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), insulin, gastrin and somatostatin were examined on isolated rat stomach ghrelin secretion, which offers the advantage of avoiding systemic interactions. Basal ghrelin secretion was in a range that did not permit to consistently evaluate inhibiting effects. Therefore, the effect of gastrointestinal hormones and insulin was analyzed during vagal prestimulation. GLP-1(7-36)amide 10(-8) and 10(-7) M decreased ghrelin secretion significantly. In contrast, GIP 10(-8) and 10(-7) M augmented not only prestimulated, but also basal ghrelin secretion (p<0.05). Insulin reduced ghrelin at 10(-10), 10(-8) and 10(-6) M (p<0.05). Both gastrin 10(-8) M and somatostatin 10(-6) M also significantly inhibited ghrelin secretion. These data demonstrate that GLP-1(7-36)amide, insulin, gastrin and somatostatin are potential candidates to contribute to the postprandially observed inhibition of ghrelin secretion with insulin being the most effective inhibitor in this isolated stomach model. GIP, on the other hand, could attenuate the postprandial decrease. Because protein-rich meals do not effectively stimulate GIP release, other as yet unknown intestinal factors must be responsible for protein-induced stimulation of ghrelin release.  相似文献   

18.
Galanin is a neuropeptide having a wide range of biological actions. Recently selective galanin receptor antagonists such as M35 [galanin(1-12)-Pro-bradykinin(2-9)-amide] and C7 [galanin(1-12)-Pro-spantide-amide] have been described. These antagonists have blocked the actions of galanin on flexor reflex, glucose-induced insulin secretion, and acetyicholine release from hippocampus. Our present aim was to investigate whether M35 and C7 can affect galanin-induced inhibition of pancreatic enzyme secretion in rats. Pancreatic enzyme secretion was studied in urethane-anesthetized rats supplied with jugular vein catheter and pancreatic cannula. Amylase secretion evoked by submaximal CCK-8 stimulation was inhibited dose-dependently by galanin in anesthetized rats. Surprisingly, neither M35 nor C7 was able to inhibit the responses of the exocrine pancreas to galanin. However, both putative galanin receptor antagonists behaved as agonists in our experimental models. Our data suggest that the effects of galanin on pancreatic enzyme secretion are not mediated by M35- or C7-sensitive galanin receptors. Therefore, these galanin receptors are different from those described in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

19.
The identification of pancreastatin in pancreatic extracts prompted the investigation of its effects on islet cell function. However, in most of the investigations to date, pig pancreastatin was tested in heterologous species. Since there is great interspecies variability in the amino acid sequence of pancreastatin, we have investigated the influence of rat pancreastatin on insulin, glucagon and somatostatin secretion in a homologous animal model, namely the perfused rat pancreas. During 5.5 mM glucose infusion, pancreastatin (40 nM) inhibited insulin secretion (ca. 40%, P less than 0.025) as well as the insulin responses to 10 mM arginine (ca. 50%, P less than 0.025) and to 1 nM vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (ca. 50%; P less than 0.05). Pancreastatin failed to significantly modify glucagon or somatostatin release under any of the above experimental conditions. In addition, a lower pancreastatin concentration (15.7 nM) markedly suppressed the insulin release evoked by 11 mM glucose (ca. 85%, P less than 0.05). Our present observations reinforce the concept that pancreastatin is an effective inhibitor of insulin secretion, influencing the B-cell function directly and not through an A-cell or D-cell paracrine effect.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of galanin on pancreatic exocrine function were examined using rat pancreatic tissues. In anesthetized rats, galanin (40 micrograms/kg/h) decreased amylase secretion stimulated by 2-deoxy glucose (5.8 +/- 0.1 vs. 3.1 +/- 0.1 times basal) and cholecystokinin octapeptide (21.5 +/- 0.6 vs. 16.8 +/- 0.5), while not inhibiting bethanechol-stimulated secretion. In dispersed acini, there was no effect of galanin alone (10(-8) to 10(-13) M) on amylase release, nor did galanin (10(-6) or 10(-8) M) coincubation affect amylase release stimulated by bethanechol (10(-3) to 10(-7) M) or CCK-8 (10(-8) to 10(-13) M). Using pancreatic lobules, coincubation with galanin (10(-6) M) suppressed 75 mM KCl-stimulated amylase secretion and ACh release (10.1 +/- 0.6% vs. 7.3 +/- 0.4%). Veratridine-stimulated (10(-4) M) amylase secretion and ACh release (12.4 +/- 1.7% vs. 8.5 +/- 0.7%) were similarly diminished.  相似文献   

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