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)

To examine the relative importance of calcium and gastrin in regulation of calcitonin secretion, we administered graded oral doses of calcium to 10 normal men, ages 23-29 yr. Each subject had previously shown an appropriate increase in calcitonin secretion in response to a pharmacologic (0.5 mug/kg) pentagastrin injection. On separate days and in random order, each man drank 250 ml of distilled water containing 0.0, 0.5, 1.5, and 3.0 g of elemental calcium as the gluconate salt. Blood samples were drawn before and at 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, and 240 min after the oral calcium dose. The samples were analyzed for calcium by atomic absorption spectroscopy, and for gastrin and calcitonin by radioimmunoassays of established sensitivity and specificity. Ingestion of water (control) caused no change in any of the three variables. Calcium ingestion resulted in dose-related increases, within the normal range, of all three variables. Immunoreactive gastrin rose promptly, peaking at 30 min, and returning to basal levels or below by 120 min. In contrast, calcium and immunoreactive calcitonin levels rose slowly and in parallel, peaking at 120-240 min. Changes in calcitonin and changes in calcium were strongly and positively correlated, r = 0.73, when all data were pooled. Furthermore, individual linear regressions for changes in calcitonin and calcium levels (calculated separately for the three oral calcium doses in each subject) had positive slopes in 28 out of 30 sets (P < 0.01). The changes in calcitonin concentrations were much more poorly correlated with the corresponding changes in serum gastrin levels; in fact, the regression coefficient was weakly negative, r = -0.20. These results show that, at least in young adult men, changes of ambient calcium concentration within the normal range may be of major importance in physiologic regulation of calcitonin secretion. The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that calcitonin functions to prevent excessive postprandial hypercalcemia.
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PMID:Regulation of calcitonin secretion in normal man by changes of serum calcium within the physiologic range. 50 Aug 34

The effects of hyperglycemia on pancreatic, biliary, and gastric secretory responses to meals have not been hitherto quantified in man. In the present study seven normal volunteers were fed on two occasions a 500-ml liquid test meal containing fat and protein. During one of the meals the subjects were made acutely hyperglycemic with intravenous glucose, whereas in control experiments, each subject received intravenous saline in place of glucose. A jejunal perfusion method was used to measure pancreatic outputs of trypsin and biliary outputs of bile salts for 150 min after the meal; the same method was used to quantify indirectly the amount of acid secreted by the stomach in the 150-min period. Serum gastrins were also measured basally and at intervals after the meal. Hyperglycemia suppressed serum gastrin, gastric acid production, trypsin secretion, and bile salt output in response to the test meal.
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PMID:The effect of acute hyperglycemia on meal-stimulated gastric, biliary, and pancreatic secretion, and serum gastrin. 124 79

Intragastric administration of certain salt components of mineral water naftusia in minimal concentrations (1-5 mmol/l) changes intensity and direction of hypergastrinemic reaction in the rats. The effect is determined by the anionic composition of salts rather than by the cationic one and depends on the initial concentration of gastrin in blood.
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PMID:[The gastrin-secreting effects of the salt components of naftusia water]. 155 33

Helicobacter pylori is a unique pathogen and the leading cause of chronic gastric inflammation. For many individuals the organism is of low virulence, causing only mild inflammation and generating few, if any, dyspeptic symptoms. For those with more severe inflammation, H. pylori infection may be causal in the generation of dyspeptic symptoms. H. pylori infection appears to be the dominant factor in peptic ulcer disease. Events considered to be of importance are a disturbed gastrin homeostasis and the development of gastric metaplasia in the bulb. The most important argument in support of the dominant role of H. pylori in duodenal ulcer disease is the markedly reduced ulcer relapse after successful eradication. Eradication proves to be difficult, presumably because of the peculiar habitat of the organism. Currently the best pharmacologic approach is triple therapy, combining a bismuth salt, metronidazole, and amoxycillin or tetracycline.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori. 177 18

Although associated primarily with the cardiovascular system, atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) has been found to increase the magnitude of duodenal contractions and may play a role in salt and water absorption across gastrointestinal epithelium. Because secretory diarrhea and increased peristalsis are commonly associated with conditions related to hypergastrinemia, we examined an animal model of hypergastrinemia (fundusectomy) to evaluate a possible role for ANF. Sprague-Dawley rats underwent either fundusectomy or sham operation. Circulating levels of gastrin (1085 +/- 105 vs 59 +/- 5 pg/ml), ANF (209 +/- 50 vs 59 +/- 10 pg/ml), and pro-ANF 1-98 (786 +/- 80 vs 599 +/- 49 pg/ml) were elevated significantly 3 months after fundusectomy versus control animals. The increased levels of ANF and pro-ANF 1-98 correlated with the increased gastrin levels (p less than 0.05). Tissue content of ANF and pro-ANF 1-98 were determined at sequential sites in the stomach and small intestine. In normal rats ANF concentrations were greatest in the small intestine; pro-ANF 1-98 content was similar in all tissues except ileum (increased). In rats that underwent fundusectomy, ANF and pro-ANF 1-98 were markedly increased in duodenum compared with all other tissues. Only duodenum showed a difference in peptide levels between normal rats and rats that underwent fundusectomy, (ANF, 1.5 +/- 0.5 vs 16.7 +/- 2.3 ng/gm; pro-ANF 1-98, 0.6 +/- 0.3 vs 51.2 +/- 36.1 ng/gm). Circulating ANF and pro-ANF 1-98 are increased in rats that have undergone fundusectomy. Our results suggest that duodenum may be the source of these increased levels.
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PMID:Atrial natriuretic factor: a possible new gastrointestinal regulatory peptide. 183 70

Neuroendocrine (NE) neoplasms of the human bronchopulmonary tract were examined by electron microscopy, immunocytochemistry, and gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins from microdissected tissue samples. All samples (carcinoids, well-differentiated NE carcinoma, NE carcinomas of intermediate type, NE carcinomas of the small cell type) contained significant numbers of cells that immunostained for one or more of the following neuroendocrine markers tested: bombesin, calcitonin, ACTH, leu-enkephalin, gastrin, serotonin, somatostatin, alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, vasoactive intestinal peptide, glucagon, insulin, substance P, and neuron-specific enolase. Electron microscopy revealed typical NE cell features, including variable abundant and frequently heterogeneous neurosecretory granules. Tumor cells contained filaments specifically stained with different conventional and monoclonal antibodies to cytokeratins and displayed punctate plasma membrane staining with antibodies to desmoplakins, in agreement with the electron microscopic demonstration of tonofilament bundles and desmosomes. Immunocytochemistry for NE markers and cytoskeletal proteins on consecutive sections revealed both cytokeratins and neuroendocrine substances in single cells. Using gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins of tissue regions extracted with high salt buffer and detergent, we could detect, in the tumors tested, appreciable amounts of cytokeratin polypeptides 8, 18, and 19, i.e., major cytokeratins also found in certain other lung carcinomas such as adenocarcinomas. Tumor cells were not significantly stained with antibodies to other intermediate filament proteins such as vimentin, desmin, glial filament protein, and neurofilament protein. The results show that NE substances can be synthesized in cells containing a typical epithelial cytoskeleton, i.e., cytokeratin filaments and desmosomes. These findings support the notion of an epithelial character of these tumors and appear in contrast with recent reports that neurofilaments are the only type of intermediate filaments present in carcinoids and other pulmonary NE tumors. These observations may have important implications for the histogenesis of NE carcinomas and for diagnostic pathology.
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PMID:Coexpression of neuroendocrine markers and epithelial cytoskeletal proteins in bronchopulmonary neuroendocrine neoplasms. 298 72

26 children were investigated on an average 11.5 years after partial (n = 13) and total (n = 13) colonic resection. Total colectomy was followed by an increased frequency of gastrointestinal symptoms such as recurrent abdominal pain, flatulence, attacks of diarrhoea, frequent and pasty or liquid stools with strange smell. An increased salt or fluid intake was observed in one half of these patients. Their height and bone age was slightly but significantly reduced. Laboratory investigations revealed no significant deficiencies of electrolyts, vitamins or trace elements. However Renin (mean and 2s-range = 5.2; 2.7-6.8 ng/ml.h, normal values (NV) 1.3; 0.5-4.0 ng/ml.h, p less than 0.02), aldosterone (242.1; 168.4-357.8 pg/ml, NV 78.9; 39.4-168.4 pg/ml, *p less than 0.02), conjugated bile acids (11.3; 5.2-20.0 mumol/1, NV 4.2; 1.5-7.0 mumol/1, p less than 0.01) and serum urea concentration (32.5; 20.8-48.7 mg/dl, NV 14.6; 6.0-22.5 mg/dl, p less than 0.01) were significantly elevated. Three postprandial plasma levels of gastrin, VIP and neurotensin were within normal limits. In patients with partial large bowel resection all signs were less pronounced. According to our results a special diet in children years after colectomy seems not to be required.
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PMID:[Late results following partial and total colectomy in infancy]. 328 87

Although abdominal complaints are frequent in both acute and chronic alcoholism, little is known of the effect of ingestion of ethanol with a meal on the function of the upper digestive tract. We have studied the effects of oral ethanol (1 g/kg body wt) taken with food on the gastric emptying rate of a solid-liquid meal as measured by a dual radioisotope technique in six normal subjects; and the gastric response (emptying and secretion), biliopancreatic secretions, and duodenal nutrient absorption after an homogenized meal, as evaluated by a gastroduodenal intubation-marker perfusion technique on seven healthy volunteers. In the latter experiments, radioimmunoassays of gastrin, secretin, cholecystokinin, pancreatic polypeptide, motilin, somatostatin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide were performed serially. As compared with the control experiment, alcohol induced the following effects: marked delay of gastric emptying of solids, smaller slowing effect on gastric emptying of the liquid phase of the solid-liquid meal and of the homogenized meal; no significant change in gastric acid secretion; no change in the overall postprandial pancreatic enzyme outputs, but a delay of lipase secretion; no change in the early bile salt postprandial output, but a reduced bile salt secretion from the second postprandial hour onwards; no significant change in carbohydrate and lipid duodenal absorption; and a significantly greater postcibal gastrin release. The mechanisms for these effects of alcohol on upper digestive tract function remain to be clarified.
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PMID:Effect of ethanol ingestion on postprandial gastric emptying and secretion, biliopancreatic secretions, and duodenal absorption in man. 370 25

Cholecystokinin is an important peptide hormone, which occurs naturally in molecular forms ranging in length from 4 to 58 amino acid residues and varying in charge from acidic to basic. In order to quantify the individual molecular forms of this hormone present in plasma or tissues, it is first necessary to efficiently extract all of the diverse forms. In this paper, we establish and validate a simple method to do this using octadecylsilane-packed cartridges. Peptide adsorption to the cartridge and subsequent elution from it is not significantly affected by the pH (3-7) or salt concentration (0-2 g per 100 ml) needed for extraction, or the protein concentration (0-10 g per 100 ml) in the applied sample. Peptides are extracted in a form which can be separated using reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and subsequently quantified by a commonly available radioimmunoassay which recognizes both cholecystokinin and gastrin.
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PMID:Extraction of cholecystokinin peptides from biological fluids using octadecylsilane-packed cartridges. 373 84

Sera from 15 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome were subjected to gel filtration on Sephadex G-50 superfine columns (10 x 2000 mm). The concentration of gastrin in the effluent was determined by a sensitive radioimmunoassay. Immunoreactive gastrin was eluted in four components in 14 sera. (1) Component I, eluted in the same position as proinsulin, constituted 9.7 +/- 1.2 (mean +/- SEM)% of the total immunoreactivity. (2) Component II (;big gastrin') eluted between proinsulin and insulin constituted 57.8 +/- 4.1% (mean +/- SEM) of immunoreactive gastrin. In three sera with the highest concentration of gastrin, component II appeared biphasic. (3) Component III (;little gastrin') was distributed in two peaks; the first one eluted in the same position as the heptadecapeptide gastrin II made up 17.4 +/- 2.7 (mean +/- SEM)% of the total immunoreactivity; the second one eluted in the same position as gastrin I constituted 9.5 +/- 1.3 (mean +/- SEM)%. (4) Component IV (;minigastrin') was eluted immediately before the salt peak and constituted 5.6 +/- 1.4 (mean +/- SEM)%. In one serum only components I and II were present. After incubation with trypsin all immunoreactivity in components I and II was converted to heptadecapeptide-like gastrins.The findings suggest that immunoreactive gastrin in serum from Zollinger-Ellison patients is circulating in at least four components of different molecular size.
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PMID:Gel filtration studies on immunoreactive gastrin in serum from Zollinger-Ellison patients. 419 48


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