Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (gastrin)
9,683 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The role of prostaglandins in endocrine diarrheagenic syndromes was evaluated by measuring peripheral concentration of immunoreactive PGE and PGF in patients with non-endocrine diarrhea as well as those with the Zollinger-Ellison (Z-E) syndrome, MCT, carcinoid tumors and the WDHA syndrome. In 21 normals, PGE and PGF levels averaged 272 +/- 18 and 119 +/- 14 pg/ml, respectively. Twenty eight patients with diarrhea of non-endocrine origin (mainly inflammatory bowel disease) had levels indistinguishable from normal, i.e. 353 +/- 25 and 77 +/- 37 pg/ml, respectively. Among 29 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (mean gastrin 6127 +/- 3267 pg/ml) only 2 had significantly elevated PGE levels; mean PGE levels, 382 +/- 32 pg/ml, were not significantly different from normal and did not correlate with either diarrhea or the serum gastrin concentration. In contrast, 18 of 22 patients with carcinoid tumors (mean blood serotonin concentration 1655 +/- 604 ng/ml; mean urinary excretion of 5 HIAA 66.8 +/- 16.7 mg/day) had elevated peripheral concentrations of PGE. The mean PGE level (1367 +/- 245 pg/ml) was significantly elevated (P less than 0.001). Nonetheless PGE levels did not correlate with diarrhea, blood concentrations of serotonin, or urinary indole excretion. MCT (mean serum calcitonin 24.5 +/- 6.3 ng/ml) was similarly associated with consistent (18/19) elevation in peripheral concentrations of PGE (mean 1922 +/- 541 pg/ml; P less than 0.001). Inthis syndrome, PGE levels were higher in patients with diarrhea and in those with markedly elevated serum thyrocalcitonin levels. Finally, 8 of 21 patients with the WDHA syndrome had increased levels of PGE. Although 13 of 17 patients had high levels of VIP (mean 8133 pg/ml), 2 patients had hyperprostaglandinemia in the face of normal peripheral concentrations of VIP. In one patient the serum PGE level was elevated prior to resection of the primary pancreatic neoplasm (9939 pg/ml) as well as the subsequent extirpation of a solitary hepatic metastasis (1063 pg/ml); following each procedure the diarrhea abated and the PGE level returned to normal. In none of these syndromes were mean PGF levels elevated. The study has documented hyperprostaglandinemia in some endocrine diarrheagenic syndromes and validated the usefullness of measurements of PGE in patients with unexplained diarrhea.
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PMID:Prostaglandins E and F in endocrine diarrheagenic syndromes. 18 8

11-Methyl 16,16 Dimethyl Prostaglandin E2 (TM-PGE) was administered orally to man in dosages of 2.5, 5,7.5 and 10 microgram/kg. Maximal inhibition of basal secretion was 52 and 78% and submaximal histamine-stimulated secretion 45 and 70% for volume and acid output, respectively. Secretory inhibition was observed for approximately two hours after ingestion of the drug. No effect was observed on serum gastrin levels. Side effects occurred with equal frequency in the placebo and drug groups. TM-PGE is well tolerated and inhibits both basal and submaximal histamine-stimulated acid secretion in man. Further evaluation may prove it to be helpful in the clinical treatment of acid hypersecretory states and peptic ulcer disease.
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PMID:The effects of 11-methyl 16,16 dimethyl prostaglandin E2 on gastric acid secretion in man. 70 19

Fasted rats were injected with either cholecystokinin-octopeptide (CCK-OP), 20 mug per kg; 16,16-dimethyl prostaglandin E2 (16,16-dimethyl PGE2), 0.2 mg per kg; pentagastrin, 250 mug per kg, or saline every 8 hr for 48 hr. The rats were killed and the incorporation of [3H]thymidine into DNA as well as the total DNA and RNA content of the mucosa of the oxyntic gland area and the duodenum were determined. Pentagastrin increased DNA synthesis 60% (P less than 0.001) in gastric mucosa and 90% (P less than 0.001) in duodenal mucosa when compared with rates for saline controls. Neither CCK-OP nor 16,16-dimethyl PGE2 altered gastric mucosal DNA synthesis. Pentagastrin significantly increased the DNA and RNA content of both the gastric and duodenal mucosa. CCK-OP and 16,16-dimethyl PGE2 caused a slight but significant increase in duodenal DNA synthesis, CCK-OP did not significantly increase duodenal DNA content, and 16,16-dimethyl PGE 2 increased duodenal RNA but not DNA content. CCK-OP (20 mug per kg) in combination with pentagastrin did not alter the stimulation of gastric DNA synthesis but significantly decreased the effect of pentagastrin on duodenal DNA. A dose of CCK-OP (370 mug per kg) equimolar to 250 mug per kg of pentagastrin did not stimulate DNA synthesis in either tissue and significantly inhibited stimulation by pentagastrin in both tissues. Low doses of CCK-OP (2.5, 5.0, 10.0, 20.0 mug per kg) caused statistically significant increases in DNA synthesis and DNA content of the pancreas, but had no effect on either mucosa of the oxyntic gland area or duodenum. 16,16-Dimethyl PGE2 did not inhibit the stimulation of DNA synthesis or the increases in DNA and RNA content stimulated by pentagastrin. From these results it appears that: (1) moderate doses of CCK have a weak trophic effect in the duodenum but not in the stomach, (2) physiological doses of CCK-OP stimulated pancreatic DNA synthesis and increased pancreatic DNA content without affecting these parameters in the oxyntic gland area or duodenum in the same animals, (3) in the stomach and duodenum CCK is not as potent a trophic hormone as gastrin and inhibits, probably competitively, the trophic effects of gastrin, (4) 16,16-dimethyl PGE2 does not stimulate growth and does not interfere with the trophic response to gastrin even though it inhibits acid secretion, and (5) 16,16-dimethyl PGE2 increased the RNA content of duodenal mucosa indicating that it may stimulate activity resulting in hypertrophy.
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PMID:Effect of cholecystokinin and 16,16-dimethyl prostaglandin E2 on RNA and DNA of gastric and duodenal mucosa. 124 85

Experimental studies located carbonic anhydrase (CA) in the parietal cells close to secretory canaliculi, in superficial epithelial cells and gastric microvasculature. The role of CA is CO2 hydration resulting H+ for acid secretion and conversion of OH into HCO3-. Our studies showed that the physiological secretagogue histamine, acetylcholine and gastrin are all CA activators, achieving potentiating interactions. Catecholamines are also strong enzymatic activators. Beside sulfonamides, other CA inhibitors are anticholinergics, PGE and PGI2, some calcium channel blockers, alpha 2- and beta 1-adrenoceptor blockers and Zn2+. Cytoprotective properties of CA inhibitors gained experimental evidence in the past years. These effects could be based on increase of gastric mucosal blood flow, proved experimentally, which might be mediated by increase of endogenous prostaglandin synthesis and sulfhydryls and, respectively, motility changes. The unique combination of strong antisecretory effect with the cytoprotective action explain the outstanding clinical efficacy of CA inhibitors in the healing of gastric and duodenal ulcers.
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PMID:Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors: antisecretory and cytoprotective properties. 251 64

The intravenous injection of prostaglandin E(1) (PGE(1)) causes a dose-dependent relaxation of the lower esophageal sphincter (LES) in the intact, lightly anesthetized opossum. The action of PGE(1) is not inhibited by the drugs that produce muscarinic or nicotinic cholinergic antagonism or alpha and beta adrenergic antagonism in the doses that inhibited the action of respective agonists. Moreover, this action is not affected by exogenous gastrin pentapeptide. The action of PGE(1) on the LES is mimicked by isoproterenol, theophylline ethylenediamine, and dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Both theophylline, a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, and isoproterenol, an adenyl cyclase stimulator, added to the action of PGE(1). On the other hand, adenyl cyclase inhibitor nicotinic acid, as well as phosphodiesterase stimulator, imidazole inhibited its action. Further, both nicotinic acid and imidazole inhibited the degree of LES relaxation produced by esophageal distension. These studies suggest that intracellular cyclic AMP may act as the "second messenger" in the regulation of the lower esophageal sphincter relaxation.
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PMID:Mechanism of the lower esophageal sphincter relaxation. Action of prostaglandin E 1 and theophylline. 434 7

In this paper, basing on recently published data, the influence of growth factors on small intestine epithelium regeneration after irradiation is presented. Our knowledge of growth control in the small intestine mucosa may become an accepted mode of radio-, chemotherapy and the treatment of acute radiation sickness in the future. Results of recent studies suggest that there are different factors which can modulate the process of epithelium regeneration. Some of them such as gastrin, enteroglucagon, CCK, EGF, FGF, TGF and IL-11 are able to enhance this process. In addition, other factor-PGE-2 is responsible for not only stimulation of small intestine epithelium growth but radioprotection as well.
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PMID:[The role of natural growth stimulators in regulation of regeneration processes in small intestinal epithelium after irradiation]. 899 62

1. The present study examines the effect of naturally occurring prostanoids and prostaglandin (PG) congeners on gastrin- and pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide (PACAP)-evoked histamine and pancreastatin secretion from isolated rat stomach ECL cells. 2. ECL cells (75-85% purity) were isolated from rat stomach using pronase digestion followed by repeated counter-flow elutriation and cultured for 48 h before secretion experiments. The release of histamine and pancreastatin was determined by radioimmunoassay. 3. None of the PGs tested stimulated the release of either histamine or pancreastatin. 4. PGE1 and PGE2 inhibited both gastrin- and PACAP-evoked histamine and pancreastatin secretion (IC50 = 1-2 x 10(-10) M). Most other naturally occuring prostanoids and PG congeners had no or little inhibitory effect. The PGE analogues misoprostol and sulprostone were more potent (IC50 = 0.9 x 10(-11) M and 2 x 10(-11) M respectively) than PGE1 and PGE2. The rank order of potency was misoprostol > sulprostone > PGE1 = PGE2, suggesting the involvement of the so-called EP3 receptor. 5. The effects of PGs on the stomach ECL cells may be direct or indirect, for instance through the stimulated release of somatostatin from contaminating D cells (2-3%). However, the amount of somatostatin in the cell culture after 48 h was below the limit of detection, and somatostatin immunoneutralization did not prevent misoprostol from inhibiting secretion from the ECL cells. 6. The misoprostol-induced inhibition was reversed by pertussis toxin suggesting the involvement of G-protein subunits G alpha(0) and/or G alpha(i). 7. In view of the potency by which PGE1, PGE2, misoprostol and sulprostone inhibited the stimulated release of histamine and pancreastatin, we suggest that the ECL cells represent a primary target for prostaglandins acting via an EP3 receptor in the oxyntic mucosa. 8. The results suggest that the clinically useful effect of misoprostol as an anti-ulcer drug reflects its ability to inhibit stomach ECL-cell histamine secretion.
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PMID:Prostaglandins inhibit secretion of histamine and pancreastatin from isolated rat stomach ECL cells. 972 Aug 5

A novel in vitro model that combined functional and morphological techniques was employed to directly examine pathways regulating Brunner's gland secretion in isolation from epithelium. In vitro submucosal preparations were dissected from guinea pig duodenum. A videomicroscopy technique was used to measure changes in luminal diameter of glandular acini as an index of activation of secretion. Carbachol elicited concentration-dependent dilations of the lumen (EC(50) = 2 microM) by activating muscarinic receptors on acinar cells. Ultrastructural and histological analyses demonstrated that dilation was accompanied by single and compound exocytosis of mucin-containing granules and the accumulation of mucoid material within the lumen. Inflammatory mediators (histamine, PGE(1), PGE(2)) and intestinal hormones (CCK, gastrin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, secretin) also stimulated glandular secretion, whereas activation of submucosal secretomotor neurons by 5-hydroxytryptamine did not. This study directly demonstrates that multiple hormonal, inflammatory, and neurocrine agents activate Brunner's glands, whereas many have dissimilar effects on the epithelium. This suggests that Brunner's glands are regulated by pathways that act both in parallel to and in isolation from those controlling epithelial secretion.
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PMID:A novel in vitro model of Brunner's gland secretion in the guinea pig duodenum. 1071 68

Helicobacter pylori, infecting more than 50% of the world population, results in gastritis, usually located in the antral portion of the stomach, accompanied by hypergastrinemia, the key factor in gastric and colorectal carcinogenesis. Excessive mucosal cell proliferation for many years may eventually result in gastric atrophy, cell mutation and transformation of gastric mucosal cells into gastrin-producing cells, which also express gastrin receptors serving to stimulate cell proliferation and tumor growth. These processes may be completed by the expression of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) as an inflammation enzyme to release excessive amounts of PGE(2), leading to further proliferation, reduction in apoptosis, angiogenesis and tumor growth. H. pylori eradication results in complete regression of MALT lymphoma and subsequent normalisation of excessive gastrin release and COX-2 expression. Reduction of gastrin by active immunisation (gastrimmune), blocking of gastrin receptors with specific blockers and suppression of COX-2 might be helpful in inhibiting tumor growth and invasion.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori infection and gastrin and cyclooxygenase expression in gastric and colorectal malignancies. 1103 48

We examined expression, function, and regulation of the cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 gene in gastric parietal cells. COX-2-specific mRNA was isolated from purified (>95%) canine gastric parietal cells in primary culture and measured by Northern blots using a human COX-2 cDNA probe. Carbachol was the most potent inducer of COX-2 gene expression. Gastrin and histamine exhibited minor stimulatory effects. Carbachol-stimulated expression was inhibited by intracellular Ca(2+) chelator 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid-AM (90%), protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor GF-109203X (48%), and p38 kinase inhibitor SB-203580 (48%). Nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB inhibitor 1-pyrrolidinecarbodithioic acid inhibited carbachol-stimulated expression by 80%. Similar results were observed in the presence of adenoviral vector Ad.dom.neg.IkappaB, which expresses a repressor of NF-kappaB. Addition of SB-203580 with Ad.dom.neg.IkappaB almost completely blocked carbachol stimulation of COX-2 gene expression. We examined the effect of carbachol on PGE(2) release by enzyme-linked immunoassay. Carbachol induced PGE(2) release. Ad.dom.neg.IkappaB, alone or with SB-203580, produced, respectively, partial (70%) and almost complete (>80%) inhibition of carbachol-stimulated PGE(2) production. Selective COX-2 inhibitor NS-398 blocked carbachol-stimulated PGE(2) release without affecting basal PGE(2) production. In contrast, indomethacin inhibited both basal and carbachol-stimulated PGE(2) release. Carbachol induces COX-2 gene expression in the parietal cells through signaling pathways that involve intracellular Ca(2+), PKC, p38 kinase, and activation of NF-kappaB. The functional significance of these effects seems to be stimulation of PGE(2) release.
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PMID:Regulation and function of COX-2 gene expression in isolated gastric parietal cells. 1201 33


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