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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Helicobacter pylori and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are major pathogenic factors in peptic ulcer disease but whether these two factors exert synergistic or antagonistic effects on ulcer healing has been a subject of controversy. We compared the effect of aspirin alone with that of aspirin combined with H. pylori on gastric acid secretion and healing of acetic acid gastric ulcers in rats. The H. pylori colonization of gastric mucosa was determined by viable H. pylori culture, histology and assessment of bacterial DNA using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The area of ulcers, gastric blood flow, mucosal generation of prostaglandin E(2) and plasma
gastrin
levels and expression of cyclooxygenase-1, cyclooxygenase-2 and growth factors was determined. Aspirin delayed significantly the healing of chronic gastric ulcers, decreased the gastric blood flow at the ulcer margin and gastric mucosal prostaglandin E(2) generation being without significant influence on gastric acid output. H. pylori acquisition that produced moderate gastric inflammation at the ulcer margin delayed significantly the healing of gastric ulcers, decreased significantly both the gastric blood flow at the ulcer margin and the gastric secretion while raising significantly the gastric mucosal prostaglandin E(2) generation and plasma
gastrin
levels. H. pylori infection attenuated the aspirin-induced inhibition of ulcer healing and accompanying fall in the gastric blood flow. Both aspirin and H. pylori up-regulated significantly cyclooxygenase-2 messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein but not that of cyclooxygenase-1 at the ulcer margin. Aspirin reduced significantly the
transforming growth factor alpha
- and vascular endothelial growth factor mRNAs, but these effects were significantly attenuated by H. pylori. We conclude that H. pylori antagonizes, in part, aspirin-induced delay of ulcer healing due to suppression of acid secretion, the enhancement in prostaglandin E(2) possibly derived from cyclooxygenase-2 and the overexpression of
transforming growth factor alpha
and vascular endothelial growth factor in the ulcer area.
...
PMID:Effect of Helicobacter pylori on delay in ulcer healing induced by aspirin in rats. 1223 91
Aims-(1) To investigate the expression of the four main hormones of the digestive tract by performing reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) on a series of samples, comprising tumoral and healthy colonic tissues, hepatic metastases and colonic cell line samples; and (2) to study the patterns of labelling obtained with serological and morphological markers.Methods-After extraction and reverse transcription,
gastrin
, somatostatin, cholecystokinin (CCK) and
transforming growth factor alpha
(TGFalpha) mRNAs were detected by PCR and nested PCR using specific primers. The corresponding proteins were detected by immunohistochemistry.Results-The cell lines expressed all four mRNAs.
Gastrin
mRNA was present in most tumoral and metastatic samples, while the somatostatin transcript was detected in all samples and was frequently overexpressed in the normal colon. TGFalpha mRNA was expressed systematically in tumours of the right and transverse colon, but not in those located in the left colon; the expression of CCK mRNA was systematically absent in the left colon.Conclusions-The data presented here shed some light on the transcriptional events involved in the production of the various hormones present in the gastrointestinal tract, in both healthy and tumoral tissues. The various mRNAs expressed in cell lines are therefore not systematically expressed in the human pathology.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal hormone mRNA expression in human colonic adenocarcinomas, hepatic metastases and cell lines. 1669 65
A new tool is described which makes it possible to evaluate directly the influence of various growth factors on in vitro neoplastic cell growth on the one hand and to look at a concept of differentiation in terms of population dynamics, on the other. This tool relies upon the digital cell image analyses of Feulgen-stained nuclei and the mathematical method of Voronoi paving. This technique enabled us to characterize the influence on the proliferation and the differentiation of the HCT-15 and LoVo colorectal cell lines of anti-
gastrin
(G), anti-estradiol (E(2)), anti-epidermal growth factor (EGF), anti-luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), and anti-
transforming growth factor alpha
(TGF alpha) and beta (TGF beta) antibodies. Two variants were set up with respect to each of the two cell lines, i.e, one growing in culture medium supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum (FCS) and another supplemented with 1% FCS+10 nM G+10 nM E(2). The data show that it is possible to characterize the cell clone structure and to assess growth rate concomitantly by direct cell counts. It further appears that while the anti-hormone and/or anti-growth factor antibody-induced effects on growth were relatively similar, these effects were in sharp contrast at the level of cell clone architecture.
...
PMID:Characterization by means of Delaunay triangulation and Voronoi paving of the influence of anti-hormone and/or anti-growth factor antibodies on the in vitro cell growth of human colorectal neoplastic cell lines. 2154 86
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