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 endopeptidase, post-proline cleaving enzyme, has been purified 10,500-fold in an overall yield of 18% from lamb kidney. The enzyme possesses a specific activity of 45 mumol/mg/min as tested with the substrate Z-Gly-Pro-Leu-Gly (Km = 6.0 X 10(-5)), has a molecular weight of 115,000, is comprised of two subunits with a molecular weight of 57,000, and exhibits maximal activity at pH 7.5 to 8.0. With the exception of the -Pro-Pro linkage, the -Pro-X-peptide bond (X equals L- and D-amino acid residues) located internally in the peptide sequence can be hydrolyzed (cleavage occurs faster when X = lipophilic side chain as compared to X = acidic side chain). The appropriate -Pro-X- bonds in zinc-free porcine insulin, oxytocin, arginine vasopressin, angiotensin II, bradykinin-potentiating factor were cleaved. Human gastrin, adrenocorticotropic hormone, denatured guinea pig skin collagen, and ascaris cuticle collagen were not degraded. Dipeptides with the structure Z-Pro-LD-X competitively inhibit post-proline cleaving enzyme.
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PMID:Post-proline cleaving enzyme. Purification of this endopeptidase by affinity chromatography. 1 73

Canine jejunal epithelial cells were isolated and maintained in short-term culture to study cholecystokinin (CCK) release. Sequential digestion of jejunal mucosa with collagenase and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid was followed by counterflow elutriation to enrich CCK-containing cells. After 40 hours in culture on collagen-coated plates, 8.4% of the initially seeded cells were attached; 8.7% of them stained positive with a C-terminal CCK/gastrin antibody and 2.5% stained positive with a gastrin-specific antibody. Basal release of CCK into the culture medium amounted to 1.3% of total cell content over 105 minutes. Receptor-independent stimulation of protein kinase C by the phorbol ester beta-phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate caused significant CCK release. The inactive form, 4 alpha-phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate, had no effect. Activation of adenylate cyclase by 10(-5) mol/L forskolin evoked a 2.5-fold increase in CCK concentrations, which was completely abolished by 10(-8) mol/L somatostatin. L-phenylalanine stimulated CCK release at 20 and 50 mmol/L, whereas D-phenylalanine caused significant hormone output only at 50 mmol/L. L-tryptophan had no effect. Cholecystokinin release stimulated by L-phenylalanine was not influenced by the addition of either somatostatin or somatostatin antibody. In conclusion, a system of isolated canine jejunal epithelial cells was developed in short-term culture. This preparation proved suitable for the study of CCK release on a cellular basis.
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PMID:Cholecystokinin release from isolated canine epithelial cells in short-term culture. 172 60

Multi-autocrine loops of the epidermal growth factor (EGF), transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and TGF beta system are expressed in human gastrointestinal carcinomas. In esophageal and gastric carcinomas, they evidently play an important role in tumor progression. Gastrin, one of the major gut hormones, may also act as an autocrine growth factor for gastric and colonic carcinomas. The HST1 and INT-2 genes, belonging to the fibroblast growth factor gene family, are coamplified in approximately 50% of primary tumors and in all the metastatic tumors of esophageal carcinoma. TGF alpha and EGF are the ligands of the tumor cells that overexpress EGF receptor in esophageal carcinomas. The synchronous expression of EGF and its receptor, as well as TGF alpha and ras p21, is evidently correlated with the depth of tumor invasion, metastasis and prognosis of gastric carcinomas. Amplification of c-erbB-2 and EGF receptor genes has been observed in many metastatic sites of gastric carcinomas regardless of histological type. In addition to TGF alpha and EGF, TGF beta and PDGF A chain produced by tumor cells may stimulate collagen synthesis not only by fibroblasts but also by tumor cells themselves, resulting in extensive progression and diffuse fibrosis of scirrhous gastric carcinomas. Moreover, TGF alpha or EGF and estrogen may also play a cooperative role in the development of scirrhous gastric carcinoma. In colorectal carcinoma, it has been shown that the accumulation of several alterations in ras genes and p53 genes is most important for the conversion of adenoma to carcinoma. Critical genetic changes, including activation of oncogenes, mutation and deletion of tumor suppressor genes and disturbances in transcriptional regulatory sequences, may bring about aberrant expression of growth factors and their receptors in gastrointestinal carcinomas. The understanding of the significance of EGF-related growth factors in tumor progression provides a framework for a biological approach to the therapy of human gastrointestinal carcinomas. 8-Cl-cAMP, which inhibits expression of oncogenes and TGF alpha, may be useful not only for cancer therapy but also for the study of cell differentiation.
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PMID:Growth factors and oncogenes in human gastrointestinal carcinomas. 215 13

Extracellular matrices have recently been demonstrated to alter cell morphology in culture. Altered cell morphology has been associated with changes in gene transcription and translation, but it is not known whether it also affects posttranslational processing. Using tyrosine-O-sulfation as a marker of processing, we studied the effects of various substrates on biologically active gastrin (IRG) production and sulfation in gastrin-containing tumor cells (GT cells). Dispersed GT cells were plated onto different substrates and then incubated. Culture media from days 4, 7, and 28 were assayed with specific antibodies that recognize total IRG and nonsulfated IRG. Cells cultured on plastic and dried films of laminin, collagen, and Matrigel (Collaborative Research Inc., Lexington, Mass.) flattened and formed monolayers of GT cells. Cells cultured on a porous membrane and hydrated gels of collagen and Matrigel did not flatten but formed spheroids of GT cells. The monolayer cultures showed an increase in sulfation with time but a decrease in IRG production. The spheroid cultures maintained a constant level of sulfation over time and, with the exception of Matrigel (gel), also showed a decrease in IRG production. These results indicate that the level of sulfation was unchanged from that of the original tumor when cells were grown in spheroids but increased when cultured as monolayers. It appears that alteration of the cellular milieu alters colony morphology, which in turn alters gastrin processing.
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PMID:Posttranslational gastrin processing depends on tumor morphology. 224 36

Bombesin, a polypeptide derived from frog skin, has been shown to stimulate gastrin release from the gastric antrum in vivo and in vitro. To elucidate the mechanisms of this effect, we developed a method to culture isolated and enriched G cells from canine stomach. After digestion of antral mucosa with collagenase and EDTA, dispersed cells were fractionated by counterflow elutriation then cultured on a collagen support. Bombesin and three molecular forms of canine gastrin-releasing peptides all stimulated gastrin release from G cells in a dose-dependent manner. The effect of bombesin was suppressed by somatostatin and potentiated by dibutyryl cyclic AMP (10(-3) M) but not by carbachol (10(-6) M). Extracellular calcium depletion attenuated the stimulation of gastrin release by bombesin but not by forskolin. These findings suggest that the bombesin family peptides directly activate G cells through calcium-dependent mechanisms to cause gastrin release.
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PMID:Stimulation of gastrin release by bombesin and canine gastrin-releasing peptides. Studies with isolated canine G cells in primary culture. 288 Aug 70

We have developed a model to allow study of the release of somatostatinlike immunoreactivity (SLI) from gastric mucosal cells. Collagenase-dispersed canine fundic mucosal cells were separated by counterflow elutriation. SLI-containing cells were identified in the fractions with small cells (9-11 microns), and these fractions were plated onto collagen. After 2 days in culture, SLI content of the cells was maintained; SLI-positive cells, detected by peroxidase-antiperoxidase immunohistochemistry, comprised 70 +/- 6% (mean +/- SE, n = 6) of these cultured cells. Release of SLI from these cultures into the medium was determined by radioimmunoassay. Epinephrine, dibutyryl cAMP, and gastrin each stimulated SLI release in a time-dependent manner, with a steady rate of secretion maintained for 120 min of incubation. Both epinephrine and dibutyryl cAMP markedly potentiated the release of SLI stimulated by gastrin but were not themselves mutually potentiating. Upon Sephadex G-50 column chromatography of incubation medium and extracts of cultured cells, SLI eluted primarily in a single peak that cochromatographed with synthetic somatostatin tetradecapeptide. Our data suggest that gastrin and adrenergic stimuli act directly on canine fundic somatostatin cells and that potentiating interactions between secretagogues may be important modulating elements in somatostatin cell secretory function.
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PMID:Release of somatostatinlike immunoreactivity from canine fundic mucosal cells in primary culture. 614 97

Using a newly developed system for culturing canine fundic mucosal cells, we examined regulation of the secretion of somatostatinlike immunoreactivity (SLI) by cholinergic and adrenergic transmitters. Enzyme-dispersed canine fundic mucosa cells were enriched in SLI content by counterflow elutriation and cultured on collagen for 42 h. Epinephrine alone, and in combination with gastrin, stimulated SLI secretion in a dose-dependent fashion. Propranolol did not alter the response to dibutyryl cAMP or gastrin but produced a parallel, rightward shift of the epinephrine dose-response curve with the dissociation constant (Ki) determined to be 14 nM by nonlinear curve fitting. Phentolamine, an alpha-adrenergic antagonist, enhanced SLI secretion in response to epinephrine, an effect reversed by the alpha 1-agonist methoxamine but not by the alpha 2-agonist clonidine. However, neither methoxamine nor clonidine alone inhibited the response to the beta-selective adrenergic agonist isoproterenol; thus, the existence of an adrenergic alpha 1-inhibitory receptor remained uncertain. Carbachol noncompetitively inhibited SLI secretion stimulated by gastrin, epinephrine, and dibutyryl cAMP. Atropine produced a parallel rightward shift of the carbachol dose-response curve (Ki = 0.4 nM). Pirenzepine also inhibited the effects of carbachol (Ki = 35 nM). Our studies suggest that SLI-containing cells in the canine fundic mucosa possess stimulatory beta-adrenergic receptors and inhibitory muscarinic receptors.
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PMID:Autonomic regulation of somatostatin release: studies with primary cultures of canine fundic mucosal cells. 614 98

New criteria of prognosis are established on the basis of study of 265 surgically removed stomach carcinomas. The factors of an unfavourable prognosis are as follows: young age, dysproteinemia, low blood coagulability, high leucocytosis and reaction of erythrocyte sedimentation, endocrine diseases, eosinophilic infiltration of stroma with high content of collagen type V and fibronectin, high expression of pepsinogen C, gastrin and carcino-embryonic antigen in the tumour parenchyma.
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PMID:[Clinico-morphologic criteria for prognosis of stomach cancer]. 760 20

In previous studies carbachol-induced stimulation of gastrin release from antral G-cells in primary culture suggested the presence of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors on this cell type. Therefore, we attempted to pharmacologically characterize the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor subtype involved. Enzymatically isolated rabbit antral mucosal cells (0.8% G-cells) were separated by counterflow elutriation yielding a fraction (1.7% G-cells) that was placed in culture on collagen-coated well plates. After 24-36 h of culture 13.0 +/- 2.4% of total adherent cells were immunoreactive for gastrin as shown by immunocytochemical staining using the avidin-biotin complex method. In this preparation basal gastrin release ranged from 3.3 +/- 0.3 to 4.1 +/- 0.3% of total cellular content. Maximal gastrin release in response to the acetylcholine receptor agonist carbachol (10(-4) M) or the selective muscarinic receptor agonist arecaidine propargyl ester (10(-4) M) was 8.5 +/- 0.4% and 7.6 +/- 0.4% of total cellular content, respectively. The EC50 values were 3.7 +/- 0.5 x 10(-6) M carbachol and 1.8 +/- 0.4 x 10(-6) M arecaidine propargyl ester. At a concentration of 10(-6) M the non-selective muscarinic receptor antagonist atropine and the muscarinic M3 receptor preferring antagonist hexahydro-sila-difenidol (HHSiD; M3 > or = M1 > M2) completely inhibited gastrin release in response to carbachol (Ki values: 52 x 10(-9) M atropine and 29 x 10(-9) M HHSiD) and arecaidine propargyl ester (Ki values: 11 x 10(-9) M atropine and 13 x 10(-9) M HHSiD).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional characterization of a muscarinic receptor stimulating gastrin release from rabbit antral G-cells in primary culture. 769 74

In order to establish the measurement of gastric mucin secreted from cultured mucous cells, rat gastric mucin was purified from secreted mucus with Sepharose CL-4B column chromatography. Gastric mucin was measured by dot blot analysis using an enzyme-linked lectin (soybean agglutinin) assay in a good concentration-dependent manner. Surface epithelial cells were dispersed by limited digestion of a rat everted stomach and collected by density gradient centrifugation with Percoll. These cells were inoculated onto gelled collagen dishes, then cultured in a medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum under a 5% CO2 atmosphere in air. Changing the medium after a 2-d culture, the cells were cultured for another 3 d. During the culture, the numbers of cells each day were almost equal, but mucin contents in the cells increased, and then dropped at day 5 after inoculation. At that time, the edge of the cell layer peeled off and the cells adhered to each other. Using 2-d cultured cells, the effects of some secretagogues on mucin secretion were investigated. Carbachol, secretin, CCK-8 and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) strongly stimulated mucin secretion, and gastrin I weakly did. However, histamine offered no stimulation.
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PMID:Gastric mucin secretion from cultured rat epithelial cells. 917 25


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