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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gastrointestinal hormones are considered to be those that are formed in the gastrointestinal tract and there, in physiological concentrations, develop their effects on motility, secretion, trophism, bloodflow and absorption. Structural analysis, synthesis or a high degree of purity after extraction, and its exact demonstration by means of a useful radioimmunoassay, form the basis for the establishment of a polypeptide as a gastrointestinal hormone. To this category belong, at the present time,
gastrin
,
cholecystokinin
-pancreozymin (CCK-PZ) and secretin. GIP, VIP, motilin, glucagon and somatostatin are considered likely candidates. The substances
gastrin
and CCK-PZ, which are structurally related and have a predominantly stimulating effect, and the structurally dissimilar motilin, contrast with the partially or totally inhibiting hormones of the glucagon family, namely, secretin, VIP, glucagon-enteroglucagon, GIP and somatostatin. By the combined action of these hormones with one another and with the autonomic nervous system, the digestive processes are regulated. Disturbances in the formation of these hormones, in particular an overproduction, give rise to disease syndromes that can now be diagnosed and, in part, treated by surgery. The therapeutic application of gastrointestinal hormones has now also become a possibility.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal hormones]. 96 Sep 54
The actions of human synthetic
gastrin
I(G), the C-terminal tetrapeptide of
gastrin
(T), and the C-terminal octapeptide of
cholecystokinin
(OP) on acid secretion and transepithelial potential difference (PD) of the isolated Necturus gastric mucosa were determined. All three peptides induced H+ secretion, but the maximum H+ output was less with OP than with G or T. G and OP produced their maximum H+ output at lower molar concentrations than T. G- and OP-stimulated secretion was long sustained, but T-stimulated secretion rapidly returned to basal levels. T- and G-stimulated secretion was partially inhibited by the addition of OP. Evidence is presented that T rapidly disappears from solutions exposed to gastric mucosa, whereas G does not. Washing sensitized the mucosa to subsequent addition of T. The results suggest that the action of the common C-terminal tetrapeptide of G, T, and OP is modified by the preceding amino acid sequences, and that T, the smallest of the three peptides, is rapidly degraded by gastric tissue in vitro. The implications of the work for the study of gastrointestinal hormone structure-function relationships in isolated tissue preparations are discussed.
...
PMID:Effects of peptide hormone structure on H+ secretion by Necturus gastric mucosa. 96 10
The primary and secondary structure of the three kinds of gastrointestinal hormones, i.e.
gastrin
,
cholecystokinin
-pancreozymin and secretin are discussed.
...
PMID:The structure of gastrointestinal hormones. 103 44
All derivatives of the C-terminal tetrapeptide fragment of gastrins with 17 amino acids elicit every physiological effect of the
gastrin
. This recognation led to detailed studies on the structure-activity relationships. In the case of
cholecystokinin
-pancreozymin, a substance consisting of 33 amino acids, the smallest sequence which possesses biological activity is the C-terminal octapeptide fragment. Synthesis of analogous derivatives of this fragment allowed the determination of the structural elements necessary to evoke the biological action.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal peptide hormone analogues. 103 45
Results of investigations on the metabolism of
gastrin
, pentagastrin,
cholecystokinin
and secretin are discussed on the basis of data in the literature. Own results concerning the metabolism of 14C-pentagastrin are also described, out of which the significance of a biologically inactive metabolite is emphasized. This metabolite can be demonstrated in the circulation, and is excreted in the urine. As judged from the present state of investigations, this metabolite has a crucial importance in the metabolism of pentagastrin.
...
PMID:Metabolism of the gastrointestinal peptide hormones. 103 46
There is evidence that under various physiological circumstances long-term adaptation of structure and function of the gut occurs. The mechanisms of these changes are not clear but gastro-intestinal hormones may be involved. In particular,
gastrin
which has been shown experimentally to stimulate growth and development of parts of the gut, probably has a role in maintaining the structure of the normal upper alimentary tract.
Cholecystokinin
may be of major importance in producing adaptive changes in the pancreas in response to dietary modifications and enteroglucagon is possibly concerned with maintaining a normal small intestinal structure. The importance of the 'trophic' action of gatrointestinal hormones is becoming more widely recognised and as new gastro-intestinal hormones become established, this aspect of their physiological importance as well as their acute effects, will deserve attention.
...
PMID:The tropic action of gastro-intestinal hormones. 109 53
A specific radioimmunoassay for motilin has been developed with the use of antisera to porcine motilin raised in guinea pigs. Highly purified 125-I-motilin was used as the tracer and the sensitivity range was 10 to 320 pg. No cross-reactivity was demonstrated with gastric inhibitory polypeptide, secretin, glucagon,
gastrin
,
cholecystokinin
-pancreozymin, or vasoactive intestinal peptide. In dogs with denervated pouches of the fundus of the stomach and Mann-Bollman fistulae, duodenal alkalinization resulted in an increase in gastric motor activity in the fundic pouch with a corresponding increase in serum motilin.
...
PMID:Radioimmunoassay for motilin. 112 96
This study was designed to determine whether
cholecystokinin
(
CCK
) plays a physiological role in the inhibition of gastric emptying. Physiological conditions were simulated by giving
CCK
by continuous intravenous infusion rather than by bolus injection, by using doses known to be distinctly submaximal for pancreatic protein secretion, and for gallbladder contraction, and by releasing endogenous
CCK
. The rate of gastric emptying was determined in 4 dogs with gastric fistulas by measuring the volume of fluid remaining in the stomach 10 min after instillation of 300 ml of 0.15 M NaCl. Rate of emptying was studied during intravenous infusion of saline (control) and of different doses of 98% pure
CCK
, commerically available 20% pure
CCK
, synthetic COOH-terminal octapeptide of
CCK
(OP-CCK), pentagastrin, and heptadecapeptide
gastrin
. The effect of endogenously released
CCK
was studied by measuring the rate of emptying of solutions in which different concentrations of tryptophan replaced equiosmolar amounts of NaCl. The d50's of 20% pure
CCK
(3 U kg minus-1 hr minus-1) and of OP-
CCK
(125 ng kg minus-1 hr minus-1) for inhibition of gastric emptying were about the same as their D50's for cholecystokinetic and pancreozyminic actions. By contrast, although both pentagastrin and heptadecapeptide
gastrin
inhibited gastric emptying, the doses required for this action were much higher than the D50's required for stimulation of gastric acid secretion. The effectiveness of OP-
CCK
indicates that inhibition of gastric emptying is attributable to
CCK
itself and not to an impurity in the
CCK
preparation. We have confirmed this directly by showing that pure
CCK
is a potent inhibitor of gastric emptying. Tryptophan also inhibited gastric emptying. In other dogs pancreatic protein secretion and gallbladder contraction were shown to be stimulated during the time tryptophan was inhibiting gastric emptying. This evidence supports the view that inhibition of gastric emptying is one of the physiological actions of
CCK
, but in the case of
gastrin
it must be regarded as a pharmacological action.
...
PMID:Inhibition of gastric emptying is a physiological action of cholecystokinin. 112 97
In four dogs with chronic pancreatic and gastric fistulas, dose-response studies of pancreatic bicarbonate and protein secretion were done with intravenous infusions of secretin, octapeptide of
cholecystokinin
(OP-CCK), and 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG). The pancreatic response to a meal and to duodenal perfusion of graded concentrations of HCl, sodium oleate, and tryptophan were also studied. These observations were repeated after division of both the hepatic and celiac vagal branches to produce extragastric vagotomy, and subsequently after transthoracic truncal vagotomy. The responses to secretin, OP-CCK, and to duodenal perfusion of HCl were either unaltered or only slightly decreased by either extragastric or truncal vagotomy. Basal pancreatic secretion and the responses to duodenal perfusion of oleate and tryptophan were markedly depressed by extragastric vagotomy. These findings indicate that tonic vagal activity contributes to basal pancreatic secretion but has little effect on the response of the pancreas to secretin or CCK or on the release of secretin from the intestine. The decreased pancreatic response to intestinally perfused oleate and tryptophan seen after extragastric vagotomy could be caused either by interruption of reflex paths between gut and pancreas or by interference with CCK release. Extragastric vagotomy reduced pancreatic responses to a meal and to 2-DG and subsequent truncal vagotomy caused still further reduction, possibly, at least in part, by depressing release of antral
gastrin
.
...
PMID:Effect of extragastric and truncal vagotomy on pancreatic secretion in the dog. 113 May 17
COOH-terminal octapeptide of
cholecystokinin
(CCK-octapeptide) and the cholinergic agent carbamylcholine each produced a fourfold stimulation of calcium outflux in guinea pig isolated pancreatic acinar cells. Neither agent altered calcium influx. Stimulation of calcium outflux was rapid and specific, was abolished by reducing the incubation temperature to 4 degrees C, and was a saturable function of the secretagogue concentration. The concentrations of CCK-octapeptide and carbamylcholine that produced half-maximal stimulation of calcium outflux were 3.1 x 10(-10) M and 4.9 x 10(-5) M, respectively. The cholinergic antagonist antropine competitively inhibited carbamylcholine stimulation of calcium outflux but did not alter stimulation produced by CCK-octapeptide. Stimulation of calcium outflux by maximal concentrations of carbamycholine plus CCK-octapeptide was the same as that produced by a maximal concentration of either agent alone.Calcium outflux became refractory to stimulation by secretagogues, and incubation with either CCK-ostapeptide or carbamylcholine produced a refractoriness to both agents. The relative potencies with CCK and its related fragments stimulated calcium outflux were CCK-octapeptide greater than heptapeptide greater than CCK greater than hexapeptide =
gastrin
. Secretin, glucagon, and vasoactive intestinal peptide, at concentrations as high as 10(-5) M, failed to alter calcium outflux and did not affect stimulation by CCK-octapeptide or by carbamycholine.
...
PMID:Action of cholecystokinin and cholinergic agents on calcium transport in isolated pancreatic acinar cells. 115 Aug 77
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