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Beales IL 《Life sciences》2004,75(25):2983-2995
The hormone gastrin stimulates proliferation of the gastric mucosa. Inflammation of the stomach is also associated with increased proliferation. The proliferative response is important in the reparative response to injury but can be deleterious by predisposing to the development of cancer. Parietal cells, but not the cells in the proliferative zone of the gastric glands, express the appropriate gastrin receptor. Parietal cells may mediate the trophic effects of gastrin by secreting other growth factors. The role of parietal cells in the proliferative responses has been examined in this study. Rabbit parietal cells were cultured with gastrin or the cytokine interleukin-1beta for 18 hours. The conditioned medium from gastrin or IL-1beta stimulated parietal cells increased proliferation of HeLa cells in an epidermal growth factor-receptor dependant manner. Gastrin and IL-1beta stimulated the secretion of heparin-binding epidermal growth factor and amphiregulin but not transforming growth factor-alpha from parietal cells. Combinations of gastrin and IL-1beta on growth factor secretion were synergistic. The protein kinase C inhibitor staurosporine abolished these stimulatory effects of gastrin and IL-1beta. Divergent effects on histamine-stimulated acid secretion were observed; 18 hours pre-treatment with gastrin enhanced acid secretion by 50% but IL-1beta inhibited acid secretion in both control and gastrin pre-treated parietal cells. The acid-secreting parietal cell plays a central role in the regulation of mucosal proliferation in gastric inflammation. Secretion of paracrine growth factors by parietal cells may be an important point of integration between the endocrine and inflammatory stimuli in determining mucosal responses to injury and inflammation.  相似文献   

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Gastrin is the principal hormonal inducer of gastric acid secretion. The cellular targets for gastrin in the stomach are the acid-secreting parietal cell and histamine-producing enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cell. Gastrin is also a growth factor, with hypergastrinemia resulting in increased proliferation of gastric progenitor cells and a thickened mucosa. This review presents insights into gastrin function revealed by genetically engineered mouse models, demonstrating a new role for gastrin in the maturation of parietal and ECL cells. Thus, gastrin regulates many aspects of gastric physiology, with tight regulation of gastrin levels required to maintain balanced growth and function of gastric epithelial cells.  相似文献   

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Gastrin is a known growth/differentiation factor for the gastric mucosa. Its effects are likely mediated by the induction of heparin-binding epidermal-like growth factor (HB-EGF), a member of the EGF family of growth factors that is expressed by gastric parietal cells. In this study, we investigated the regulation of the HB-EGF promoter by gastrin in a human gastric cancer cell line. Serial human HB-EGF promoter-luciferase reporter deletion constructs and heterologous promoter constructs were transfected into AGS-E cells and stimulated with gastrin (10(-7) M) with or without various signal transduction inhibitors. EMSA were also performed. Gastrin stimulation resulted in a fivefold increase in HB-EGF-luciferase activity. The cis-acting element mediating gastrin responsiveness was mapped to the -69 to -58 region of the HB-EGF promoter. Gastrin stimulation was PKC dependent and at least partially mediated by activation of the EGF receptor.  相似文献   

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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   

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The ligands interacting with enterochromaffin-like (ECL) and parietal cells and the signaling interactions between these cells were investigated in rabbit gastric glands using confocal microscopy. Intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) changes were used to monitor cellular responses. Histamine and carbachol increased [Ca(2+)](i) in parietal cells. Gastrin (1 nM) increased [Ca(2+)](i) in ECL cells and adjacent parietal cells. Only the increase of [Ca(2+)](i) in parietal cells was inhibited by H(2) receptor antagonists (H(2)RA). Gastrin (10 nM) evoked an H(2)RA-insensitive [Ca(2+)](i) increase in parietal cells. Carbachol produced large H(2)RA- and somatostatin-insensitive signals in parietal cells. Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide (PACAP, 100 nM) elevated [Ca(2+)](i) in ECL cells and adjacent parietal cells. H(2)RAs abolished the PACAP-stimulated [Ca(2+)](i) increase in adjacent parietal cells. Somatostatin did not inhibit the increase of [Ca(2+)](i) in parietal cells stimulated with histamine, high gastrin concentrations, or carbachol but abolished ECL cell calcium responses to gastrin or PACAP. Hence, rabbit parietal cells express histaminergic, muscarinic, and CCK-B receptors coupled to calcium signaling but insensitive to somatostatin, whereas rabbit and rat ECL cells express PACAP and CCK-B calcium coupled receptors sensitive to somatostatin.  相似文献   

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In view of the complexity of the regulation of gastric acid secretion, isolated parietal cells offer the appealing prospect of studying the receptors and mechanisms activating this cell after it has been removed from the confusing milieu of the intact mucosa. Histamine and cholinergic agents stimulate the function of canine parietal cells by interacting with typical H2 and muscarinic receptors. Gastrin produces only a small stimulation, interacting with a third, presumably specific, receptor. Combinations of histamine and carbachol and of histamine and gastrin produce potentiating interactions. When isolated parietal cells are treated with these combinations of agents, cimetidine and atropine display and apparent lack of specificity, reminiscent of that found in vivo, and probably resulting from interference with the histamine and cholinergic components of these potentiating interactions. The action of histamine, but not of carbachol or gastrin, is linked to stimulation of cyclic AMP production by parietal cells. Two potential inhibitors of acid secretion, secretin and prostaglandin E2, also stimulate cyclic AMP production, but these later effects appeared to occur largely in nonparietal cells. PGE2 however specifically inhibits histamine-stimulated parietal cell function, apparently by blocking activation of adenylate cyclase. Cholinergic action on the other hand is closely linked to enhanced influx of extracellular calcium.  相似文献   

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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   

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Gastrin and ghrelin are secreted from G cells and X/A-like cells in the stomach, respectively, and respective hormones stimulate gastric acid secretion by acting through histamine and the vagus nerve. In this study, we examined the relationship between gastrin, ghrelin and gastric acid secretion in rats. Intravenous (iv) administration of 3 and 10 nmol of gastrin induced transient increases of ghrelin levels within 10 min in a dose-dependent manner. Double immunostaining for ghrelin and gastrin receptor revealed that a proportion of ghrelin cells possess gastrin receptors. Although (iv) administration of gastrin or ghrelin induced significant gastric acid secretion, simultaneous treatment with both hormones resulted in a synergistic, rather than additive, increase of gastric acid secretion. This synergistic increase was not observed in vagotomized rats.These results suggest that gastrin may directly stimulate ghrelin release from the stomach, and that both hormones may increase gastric acid secretion synergistically.  相似文献   

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Calcium signaling mechanisms in the gastric parietal cell.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Gastric hydrochloric acid (HCl) secretion is stimulated in vivo by histamine, acetylcholine, and gastrin. In vitro studies have shown that histamine acts mainly via a cAMP-dependent pathway, and acetylcholine acts via a calcium-dependent pathway. Histamine also elevates intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) in parietal cells. Both gastrin and acetylcholine release histamine from histamine-containing cells. In humans, rats, and rabbits, there is considerable controversy as to whether or not gastrin receptors are also present on the parietal cell. We utilized digitized video image analysis techniques in this study to demonstrate gastrin-induced changes in intracellular calcium in single parietal cells from rabbit in primary culture. Gastrin also stimulated a small increase in [14C]-aminopyrine (AP) accumulation, an index of acid secretory responsiveness in cultured parietal cells. In contrast to histamine and the cholinergic agonist, carbachol, stimulation of parietal cells with gastrin led to rapid loss of the calcium signaling response, an event that is presumed to be closely related to gastrin receptor activation. Moreover, different calcium signaling patterns were observed for histamine, carbachol, and gastrin, Previous observations coupled with present studies using manganese, caffeine, and ryanodine suggest that agonist-stimulated increases in calcium influx into parietal cells do not occur via voltage-sensitive calcium channels or nonspecific divalent cation channels. It also appears to be unlikely that release of intracellular calcium is mediated by a muscle or neuronal-type ryanodine receptor. We hypothesize that calcium influx may be mediated by either a calcium exchange mechanism or by an unidentified calcium channel subtype that possesses different molecular characteristics as compared to muscle, nerve, and certain secretory cell types such as, for example, the adrenal chromaffin cell. Release of intracellular calcium may be mediated via both InsP3-sensitive and -insensitive mechanisms. The InsP3-insensitive calcium pools, if present, do not appear, however, to possess ryanodine receptors capable of modulating calcium efflux from these storage sites.  相似文献   

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Many physiological functions of the stomach depend on an intact mucosal integrity; function reflects structure and vice versa. Histamine in the stomach is synthesized by histidine decarboxylase (HDC), stored in enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells, and released in response to gastrin, acting on CCK(2) receptors on the ECL cells. Mobilized ECL cell histamine stimulates histamine H(2) receptors on the parietal cells, resulting in acid secretion. The parietal cells express H(2), M(3), and CCK(2) receptors and somatostatin sst(2) receptors. This review discusses the consequences of disrupting genes that are important for ECL cell histamine release and synthesis (HDC, gastrin, and CCK(2) receptor genes) and genes that are important for "cross-talk" between H(2) receptors and other receptors on the parietal cell (CCK(2), M(3), and sst(2) receptors). Such analysis may provide insight into the functional significance of gastric histamine.  相似文献   

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Sonic hedgehog (Shh) is not only essential to the development of the gastrointestinal tract, but is also necessary to maintain the characteristic acid-secreting phenotype of the adult stomach. Gastrin is the only hormone capable of stimulating gastric acid and is thus required to maintain functional parietal cells. We have shown previously that gastrin-null mice display gastric atrophy and metaplasia prior to progression to distal, intestinal-type gastric cancer. Because reduced levels of Shh peptide correlate with gastric atrophy, we examined whether gastrin regulates Shh expression in parietal cells. We show here that gastrin stimulates Shh gene expression and acid-dependent processing of the 45-kDa Shh precursor to the 19-kDa secreted peptide in primary parietal cell cultures. This cleavage was blocked by the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole and mediated by the acid-activated protease pepsin A. Pepsin A was also the protease responsible for processing Shh in tissue extracts from human stomach. By contrast, extracts prepared from neoplastic gastric mucosa had reduced levels of pepsin A and did not process Shh. Therefore processing of Shh in the normal stomach is hormonally regulated, acid-dependent, and mediated by the aspartic protease pepsin A. Moreover parietal cell atrophy, a known pre-neoplastic lesion, correlates with loss of Shh processing.  相似文献   

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Peritoneal metastasis is a major cause of recurrence of gastric cancer and integrins are key molecules involved in gastric cancer cells attachment to the peritoneum. The peptide hormone, gastrin, initially identified for its role in gastric acid secretion is also a growth factor for gastric mucosa. Gastrin has also been shown to contribute to gastric cancers progression. Here, we provide the first evidence that gastrin increases the adhesion of gastric cancer cells. Gastrin treatment induces the expression of α2 integrin subunit through a mechanism that involves the ERK pathway. We also observed in response to gastrin an increase in the amount of α2 integrin associated with β1subunit. In addition, gastrin-stimulated cell adhesion was blocked with an anti-α2β1 integrin neutralizing antibody. We also show that gastrin activates the integrin pathway via the phosphorylation of β1 integrin by a Src family kinase. This mechanism may contribute to the enhancement of cell adhesion observed in response to gastrin since we found an inhibition of gastrin-mediated cell adhesion when cells were treated with a Src inhibitor. By regulating one of the key step of the metastatic process gastrin might contribute to increase the aggressive behaviour of human gastric tumours.  相似文献   

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The localization of the gastrin/CCKB receptor (GR) has recently become a subject of debate, especially since the publication of evidence for its presence in an unsuspected location, namely in the lamina propria, the submucosal layer of the stomach lining. Knowledge of the receptor localization is important because of the critical role of gastrin secretion and its trophic effects on the gastric epithelium. The present study, which utilizes immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy as primary tools, provides unequivocal data concerning the localization of GR in the guinea pig stomach. GR is expressed in parietal cells, on chief cells, and in previously unreported endocrine cells of the stomach. It is not found in the lamina propria. The predominant localization of the receptor in the endocrine cells is on the membranes of cytoplasmic electron-dense secretory granules. The positioning of these cells in the gastric glands suggests that they may be involved in the uptake of gastrin from the circulation. The distribution of GR implies that it may be involved in the regulation of various processes and may mediate various effects of gastrin in the stomach.  相似文献   

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Although hypergastrinemia is frequently observed in individuals with a chronic Helicobacter pylori infection, its pathophysiological significance in gastric mucosal inflammation is unclear. The present study was designed to determine if gastrin induces the expression of CXC chemokines in gastric epithelial cells. Human and rat gastric epithelial cells, transfected with gastrin receptor, were stimulated with gastrin. The expression of mRNAs for human interleukin-8 (IL-8) and rat cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant-1 and release of human IL-8 protein were then determined by Northern blot analysis and ELISA, respectively. Gastrin not only induced the expression of mRNAs for these chemokines but also stimulated IL-8 protein release. A luciferase assay using IL-8 promoter genes showed that nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB is absolutely required and activator protein-1 (AP-1) is partly required for the maximum induction of IL-8 by gastrin. An electrophoretic mobility shift assay revealed that gastrin is capable of activating both NF-kappaB and AP-1. In addition, the inhibition of NF-kappaB abrogated gastrin-induced chemokine expression. These results suggest that gastrin is capable of upregulating CXC chemokines in gastric epithelial cells and therefore may contribute to the progression of the inflammatory process in the stomach.  相似文献   

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