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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although
gastrin
, histamine, and carbachol (CCh) accelerate gastric mucin metabolism, information about their target cells of
mucin
production is lacking. To clarify this, we examined the effects of these stimulants, including the possible participation of nitric oxide (NO), on
mucin
biosynthesis in distinct sites and layers of rat gastric mucosa. Pieces of tissue obtained from the corpus and antrum were incubated in a medium containing radioactive precursors and each stimulant, with or without NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor. Distribution of NOS was compared with that of the specific mucins by immunostaining using specific antiserum and monoclonal antibodies. In the full-thickness corpus mucosa, tetragastrin enhanced [3H]glucosamine incorporation into
mucin
but had no effect on [14C]threonine incorporation. Both histamine and CCh dose dependently increased 3H- and 14C-labeled corpus
mucin
. Only CCh stimulated antral
mucin
biosynthesis. CCh stimulation was noted in the corpus mucosa after removal of surface mucous cells, but stimulation by tetragastrin or histamine disappeared as a result of this pretreatment. Only tetragastrin-induced activation was completely blocked by the NOS inhibitor. NOS immunoreactivity was limited to surface mucous cells. Mucus-producing cells present in the different sites and layers of the gastric mucosa have distinct mechanisms for regulation of
mucin
biosynthesis.
Gastrin
-stimulated
mucin
biosynthesis mediated by NO is limited to surface mucous cells of rat gastric oxyntic mucosa.
...
PMID:Distinct effects of tetragastrin, histamine, and CCh on rat gastric mucin synthesis and contribution of NO. 945 83
We studied the relation between Helicobacter pylori and residual gastritis in 28 patients with gastric cancer on whom distal partial gastrectomy with Billroth I reconstruction was performed over a 13-month period. They were subjected to serologic testing along with endoscopic and histologic examinations before operation and at 3, 6, and 12 months after operation. Anti-H. pylori immunoglobulin G (IgG) and serum
gastrin
levels were measured by serologic tests. The presence or absence of gastritis was determined endoscopically, and gastric mucosal hexosamine levels were determined. Gastritis was measured quantitatively by histologic examination in specimens taken from the gastric mucosa using Rauws' score. After the initial histologic evaluation we divided the H. pylori-positive patients into two groups: those with a Rauws' score of 0 to 3 ("weak" gastritis group), and those with a Rauws' score of 4 to 10 ("strong" gastritis group), allowing us to compare the results of our three postoperative histologic examinations of the two groups for possible significant differences. Our endoscopic examinations showed gastric mucosal inflammatory changes in both H. pylori-positive and H. pylori-negative patients at 3, 6, and 12 months after operation, but there was no significant difference between these two groups at any point. During the histologic examinations, however, anti-H. pylori IgG assay had become negative in several patients in the "weak" gastritis group at 3 months after operation and was found to have become negative in 78% of all patients in that group 12 months after operation. In contrast, in the "strong" gastritis group H. pylori infection was still evident in the patients 12 months after operation, suggesting that "strong" histologic gastritis may have some connection to H. pylori infection, whereas "weak" histologic gastritis has no such connection. The gastric mucosal hexosamine level was higher in the "weak" gastritis group than in the "strong" gastritis group both before operation and at 6 and 12 months, indicating some relation between gastric inflammatory changes and hexosamine levels in gastric mucosa. It further suggested the possibility that H. pylori plays a role in destroying gastric mucosa by depleting
mucin
, thus acting as one (though not the only) cause of residual gastritis after distal partial gastrectomy. In conclusion, we found evidence that there is a relation between residual gastritis and H. pylori infection, but H. pylori is not the sole cause of residual gastritis after gastric surgery. A causal relation is difficult to detect by simple analysis of histologic findings or by endoscopic observation or clinical symptoms alone.
...
PMID:Role of Helicobacter pylori in residual gastritis after distal partial gastrectomy. 946 58
beta-Microseminoprotein is a 10-kDa disulphide-rich protein with unknown function which is present in the mucus of the airways, gastrointestinal tract and urogenital tract. In this paper, an investigation of the distribution of beta-microseminoprotein in the human stomach is reported. Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization were used. beta-Microseminoprotein was found to be localized mainly in the antrum part of the stomach and in two types of cells. Cells of the most abundant type (designated M-cells) were the neutral
mucin
-containing cells in the bottom part of the gastric glands and the surface epithelium. Virtually all these cells contained both beta-microseminoprotein mRNA and protein product. Cells of the second type (designated E-cells) were found in a zone one-third up from the bottom of the gastric glands, where gastric endocrine cells are located. The E-cells were fewer than the M-cells and usually solitary. They seemed to have a high concentration of protein compared with their low mRNA level. The majority of the E-cells contained chromogranin A and
gastrin
. The observations made have implications for the understanding of the differentiation of the mucosal cells in the antrum of the stomach and form a basis for future studies of beta-microseminoprotein in gastric disease.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization studies of beta-microseminoprotein in the human gastric mucosa. 946 51
Mucin biosynthesis is stimulated by
gastrin
during the process of glycosylation in the corpus mucosa of the rat stomach. The purpose of this study was to clarify, using an organ culture technique, whether biosynthetic responses to histamine in the rat gastric mucin are the same as that to
gastrin
. Radiolabeled
mucin
was obtained from the corpus and antral mucosa of the rat stomach after in vitro incubation for 5 h with [3H]glucosamine (GlcN), [14C]threonine (Thr), and [35S]sulfate. Addition of histamine (10(-7)-10(-5) M) to the culture medium increased [3H]GlcN-labeled
mucin
in the corpus tissue in a concentration-dependent manner. In the antrum, there was no significant change in the biosynthetic activity of
mucin
in response to histamine. Histamine at 10(-5) M also increased the incorporation of both [35S]sulfate and [14C]Thr into the corpus
mucin
. These results indicate that histamine stimulates the biosynthesis of the
mucin
peptide, as well as the glycosylation step in the corpus, and suggest that the effect of histamine on
mucin
synthesis is distinct from that of
gastrin
.
...
PMID:Effects of histamine on mucin biosynthesis in rat gastric mucosa. 947 32
Helicobacter pylori plays a major role in the pathogenesis of gastric disease. The gastric epithelial integrity is compromised by the H. pylori cell wall lipopolysaccharide untoward effect on the gastric epithelial cell receptors interaction with proteins of extracellular matrix, glycoproteins of mucus coat, and bioactive peptides. These interactions cause the weakening of the mucus coat rendering the underying epithelium vulnerable to noxious luminal contents and disrupting the regulatory feedback of somatostatin and
gastrin
. Moreover, H. pylori lipopolysaccharide induces histologic lesions typical of acute gastritis and these changes are reflected in the increased epithelial cell apoptosis. These findings thus identify cell wall lipopolysaccharide as a virulent factor responsible for the H. pylori effect on gastric epithelium. The effect of antiulcer agents on the interference of lipopolysaccharide with the laminin receptor was found to be most efficiently countered by ebrotidine, sulglycotide and sucralfate, whereas sulglycotide is the most potent in the reversal of the inhibitory effect of the lipopolysaccharide on
mucin
receptor binding. In the case of somatostatin-receptor binding, sulglycotide followed by sucralfate and ebrotidine showed the most potency in of reversing the effect of H. pylori lipopolysaccharide. Thus these antiulcer agents have a great promise in the treatment gastric diseases associated with H. pylori infection.
...
PMID:Lipopolysaccharide a virulence factor of Helicobacter pylori: effect of antiulcer agents. 959 7
The case of a malignant pancreatic endocrine neoplasm with an unusual signet ring cell appearance is reported. The tumor was resected from a 30-year-old man with a 4.0-cm tumor in the body of the pancreas diagnosed by computerized tomographic (CT) scan. The resected tumor had a unique morphology characterized by numerous
mucin
-negative, signet ring cells, which were argyrophilic and immunoreactive for cytokeratin (CAM 5.2), chromogranin, synaptophysin, neuron specific enolase, and
gastrin
. Dense-core neurosecretory-type granules and numerous cytoplasmic lamellar inclusions were identified by electron microscopy. These inclusion bodies consisted of multilayered concentric osmiophilic lamellae (myelin figures), which most likely represent an abnormal accumulation of degenerating organelles. Two years later, the patient developed an abdominal recurrence of the tumor, confirming its malignant behavior. This case expands the spectrum of pancreatic endocrine tumors to include an aggressive signet ring cell tumor with a novel ultrastructural basis.
...
PMID:Pancreatic endocrine tumor with signet ring cell features: a case report with novel ultrastructural observations. 961 84
Expression of 25 mRNAs in a single human lymphocyte was investigated using the reverse transcription nested polymerase chain reaction (RT nested PCR) method. Proteins corresponding to the mRNA investigated were
mucin
antigen, melanoma antigen, pregnancy-specific beta-1 glycoprotein 4, phenylethanolamine-N-methyl-transferase, beta B3-crystallin, homeobox 4A, interleukin 2, cluster of differentiation 8, progesterone receptor, parathyroid hormone,
gastrin
, cholecystokinin/pancreozymin, glucagon, insulin, enkephalin, thyroid stimulating hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, synapsin I, immunoglobulin (Ig)M, IgD, IgG1, IgG3, IgE, IgA, and T cell receptor alpha. All mRNAs were detected in single lymphocytes of two individuals, without exception. In addition, transcripts of IgM, IgD, IgG1, IgG3, IgE, IgA, and the T cell receptor a gene were detected in single sperms. The results strongly suggest the possibility that all mRNAs may be expressed in a single human cell, of both somatic and germ lineage. Thus, cells can consume energy in vain to produce functionally meaningless gene transcripts. However, this basal or illegitimate transcription may be essential for the birth of living matter: the arrow of time in a cell. Moreover, the phenomenon implies the potential of using lymphocytes in place of inaccessible tissue for the diagnosis of genetic diseases.
...
PMID:A single human cell expresses all messenger ribonucleic acids: the arrow of time in a cell. 964 29
The diagnosis of adenocarcinoid (mucinous/goblet cell carcinoid) is usually unexpected by both clinicians and pathologists. We report here the case of a 74-year-old man with gastric lymphoma (B-cell MALToma) diagnosed by endoscopy, who was found on exploratory laparotomy also to have extensive intraabdominal involvement by adenocarcinoid, arising from the ileum and/or appendix. The patient died two years after diagnosis with bladder outlet and small bowel obstruction due to diffuse metastases. In addition to
mucin
positivity, immunohistochemical stains demonstrated the tumor to be positive for chromogranin, synaptophysin, serotonin,
gastrin
, and glucagon. Of histogenetic interest, some individual neoplastic cells appeared to be positive for both
mucin
and chromogranin, and this was confirmed by the electron microscopic finding of microvilli, intracytoplasmic
mucin
droplets, and neurosecretory granules involving the same neoplastic cells. This also appears to be the first reported case of adenocarcinoid associated with lymphoma and demonstration of histochemical/immunohistochemical and ultrastructural evidence of cellular components with dual mucinous adenocarcinoma and neuroendocrine features, and the second reported case to have prostatic metastases.
...
PMID:Adenocarcinoid of ileum and appendix, incidentally discovered during exploratory laparotomy for gastric MALT lymphoma, with subsequent diffuse prostatic metastases: report of a case with light, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopic studies. 995 28
A case of a pyloric gland type adenoma of the main pancreatic duct in a 69-year-old woman is reported. The tumor led to occlusion and cystic dilatation of the main duct in the pancreatic tail. The surgical resection specimen disclosed a polypoid, bilobed mass attached to the wall of the main pancreatic duct by a thin fibrous stalk. Light-microscopic examination revealed a well-demarcated nodule composed of closely packed tubular glands lined by columnar,
mucin
-secreting cells with abundant clear cytoplasm and basally oriented nuclei. Focal, mild cytologic atypia was seen. Pyloric metaplasia and focal papillary hyperplasia was present in the adjacent ductal epithelium. Periodic acid-Schiff reactions, with and without diastase predigestion, showed reactivity in the tubular glands, whereas alcian blue (pH 2.5) was negative. Immunohistochemical stains for chromogranin, serotonin, somatostatin, and
gastrin
failed to detect the respective antigens. Genetic analysis using polymerase chain reaction with mutant enrichment and allele specific oligonucleotide hybridization detected a single mutation at codon 12 of K-ras, which changed the wild-type glycine to arginine. This mutation is commonly found in invasive pancreatic ductal carcinomas. Although tumors with microscopic and immunohistochemical features consistent with pyloric gland adenoma have been described in the gallbladder, to our knowledge, this is the first reported case within the pancreatic ductal system. The finding of a K-ras, codon 12 mutation and the presence of focal dysplasia may denote neoplastic potential in association with this lesion.
...
PMID:Pyloric gland adenoma of the main pancreatic duct. 998 51
The effects of tetragastrin on gastric mucin biosynthesis in middle-aged rats were compared with those in young rats. The incorporation of [3H]glucosamine and [35S]sulfate into
mucin
was stimulated by tetragastrin in cultured corpus mucosa from 7-week-old rats. In contrast, tetragastrin could not enhance
mucin
biosynthesis in stomachs from 52-week-old rats. The isosorbide dinitrate-induced stimulation of corpus
mucin
biosynthesis observed in middle-aged rats was essentially the same as that seen in young rats. Nitric oxide (NO) synthase activity of the corpus was significantly reduced in the middle-aged rats compared to the young rats. NO synthase-immunoreactivity was observed at surface mucous cells in the corpus mucosa of young, but not of middle-aged, rats. These results suggest that aging decreases the effect of
gastrin
on gastric mucin biosynthesis through the age-related loss of NO synthase function in the surface mucous cell layer of rat stomach.
...
PMID:Age-related stimulation by tetragastrin of gastric mucin biosynthesis in rat. 1006 56
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