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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Vesicular monoamine transporters (VMATs) translocate monoamines from the cytoplasm into secretory vesicles of endocrine cells and neurones, but they have limited affinity for histamine, and the identity of the vesicular transporter for this monoamine is uncertain. The aims of the present study were to characterize VMAT representatives in rat gastric corpus, and to determine if their expression was regulated by factors that modulate histamine biosynthesis. 2. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) cloning using oligonucleotide primers to DNA sequences conserved within the VMAT family provided evidence for VMAT2, but not
VMAT1
in rat gastric corpus. Northern analysis using a VMAT2 complementary RNA probe revealed a single 4 kb mRNA species in corpus endocrine cells. 3. In rats treated for up to 5 days with the H(+)-K(+)-ATPase inhibitor omeprazole, VMAT2, histidine decarboxylase and chromogranin A mRNA abundance in gastric corpus, and plasma
gastrin
concentrations increased progressively. Omeprazole also elevated VMAT2 expression in rats fasted for 48 h, but fasting alone, or refeeding fasted animals had no effect. 4. The results are consistent with a role for VMAT2 in the transport of histamine into enterochromaffin-like cell secretory vesicles, and with upregulation of the transporter to accommodate the increased histamine biosynthesis and secretion that accompanies achlorhydria.
...
PMID:Expression and regulation of a vesicular monoamine transporter in rat stomach: a putative histamine transporter. 874 92
1. Conversion of prohormone precursors to smaller active products occurs in secretory granules, which also have the capacity to concentrate biogenic amines. We have examined how processing of the
gastrin precursor
, progastrin, in rat antral mucosa is influenced by modulation of the biogenic amine content of secretory granules. 2. Newly synthesized progastrin-derived peptides in rat antral mucosa were labelled in vitro with 35SO4(2-) using a pulse-chase protocol and detected after immunoprecipitation by HPLC with on-line liquid scintillation counting. Secretory granule morphology was examined by electron microscopy. The effects of experimentally manipulating secretory granule pH and amine content were examined. 3. The dopamine precursor L-beta-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) inhibited cleavage of 35S-labelled thirty-four amino acid amidated
gastrin
, i.e. [35S]
G34
, and of [35S]
G34
with COOH-terminal glycine, i.e. [35S]
G34
-Gly, at a pair of lysine residues, but did not influence cleavage of progastrin at pairs of arginine residues. The effect of L-DOPA was reversed by reserpine, which inhibits the amine-proton exchangers
VMAT1
and VMAT2, and by carbidopa, which inhibits aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase. 4. Treatments that raise intragranular pH, e.g. the weak base chloroquine, the ionophore monensin and the vacuolar proton pump inhibitor bafilomycin A1, had similar effects to L-DOPA. 5. Electron microscopical studies showed that the electron-dense aggregrates in
gastrin
cell secretory granules were lost after inhibition of the vacuolar proton pump. Treatment with L-DOPA produced reserpine-sensitive dissipation of the electron-dense aggregates, compatible with the idea that increased amine delivery raised intragranular pH. 6. The data suggest that the processes of amine precursor uptake, decarboxylation and sequestration in secretory granules are associated with selective modulation of progastrin cleavage, possibly by raising intragranular pH and thereby inhibiting pH-sensitive prohormone convertases.
...
PMID:Amine precursor uptake and decarboxylation: significance for processing of the rat gastrin precursor. 919 8
Gastrin
and histamine both potently stimulate secretion of acid into the gastric lumen. How these agents interact and how their release is controlled is poorly understood. Therefore, we decided to look for histamine in the antral portion of the rat stomach where the
gastrin
-producing G cells are located. We used immunocytochemical methods to visualize histamine, histidine decarboxylase (HDC, the enzyme that converts histidine to histamine), and the type 1 vesicular monoamine transporter (
VMAT1
, the protein responsible for moving histamine into vesicles for storage and release). We were surprised to find that histamine, HDC, and
VMAT1
were all present in G cells. Our results suggest that G cells synthesize and secrete
gastrin
and histamine. Whether histamine acts in concert with
gastrin
to stimulate acid secretion, or functions as an autocrine inhibitor of
gastrin
release remains to be seen.
...
PMID:Gastrin-producing endocrine cells: a novel source of histamine in the rat stomach. 975 25
1. Gastrointestinal endocrine cells produce biogenic amines which are transported into secretory vesicles by one of two proton-amine exchangers, vesicular monoamine transporters type 1 and 2 (
VMAT1
and 2). We report here the presence of
VMAT1
in rat
gastrin
(G) cells and the relevance of
VMAT1
function for the modulation of progastrin processing by biogenic and dietary amines. 2. In immunocytochemical studies
VMAT1
, but not VMAT2, was localized to subpopulations of G cells and enterochromaffin (EC) cells; neither was found in antral D cells. The expression of
VMAT1
in antral mucosa was confirmed by Northern blot analysis, which revealed an mRNA band of approximately 3.2 kb, and by Western blot analysis, which revealed a major protein of 55 kDa. 3. In pulse-chase labelling experiments, the conversion of the amidated
gastrin
G34
to G17 was inhibited by biogenic amine precursors (L-DOPA and 5-hydroxytryptophan). This inhibition was stereospecific and sensitive to reserpine (50 nM), which blocks
VMAT1
and VMAT2, but resistant to tetrabenazine, which is a selective inhibitor of VMAT2. 4. Dietary amines such as tyramine and tryptamine also inhibited
G34
cleavage. This effect was associated with a loss of the electron-dense core of G cell secretory vesicles. It was not stereospecific or reserpine sensitive, but was correlated with hydrophobicity. 5. Thus rat antral G cells can express
VMAT1
; transport of biogenic amines into secretory vesicles by
VMAT1
is associated with inhibition of
G34
cleavage, perhaps by raising intravesicular pH. Dietary amines also modulate cleavage of progastrin-derived peptides, but do so by a
VMAT1
-independent mechanism; they may act as weak bases that passively permeate secretory vesicle membranes and raise intravesicular pH.
...
PMID:Modulation of gastrin processing by vesicular monoamine transporter type 1 (VMAT1) in rat gastrin cells. 1033 97
Cellular distribution of vesicular monoamine transporters (VMATs), known to regulate vesicular storage and release of biogenic amines (i.e., catecholamines, serotonin, histamine, etc.), have been studied in the rat stomach using in situ hybridization histochemistry (ISHH) and immunohistochemical (IHC) techniques. 35S-UTP labeled riboprobes showed that mRNAs of both VMATs are expressed in the gastric mucosa. A combination of ISHH and IHC verified that most of the parietal cells (among other epithelial cells) express mRNA of the peripheral type transporter (
VMAT1
) while enterochromaffin-like cells (ECL) of the fundic mucosa express mRNA of the central type (VMAT2). In addition, with double fluorescent IHC we detected
VMAT1
protein in serotoninergic enterochromaffin cells (EC) of the stomach and in
gastrin
producing G cells of the antral mucosa. Similarly to the fundus, VMAT2 protein was present in ECL cells and in the enteric plexus. Surprisingly, serotonin- and/or histamine-containing cells in the connective tissue compartments of the stomach (i.e., lamina propria and submucosa), immunoreactive for a mast cell specific antigen, displayed neither VMATI nor VMAT2 immunoreactivity. Distribution of VMATs in the rat stomach support our previous observations on aminergic properties of two important gastrointestinal (GI) epithelial cell populations primarily known for other specific secretory products, i.e. dopaminergic properties of acid producing parietal cells and histaminergic properties of
gastrin
producing G cells. These data emphasize the existence of a non-neuronal, intrinsic aminergic system in the GI tract.
...
PMID:Vesicular monoamine transporters in the rat stomach. 1079 93