Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study investigated the way that sucking of a pacifier influences gastric secretory and motor functions in connection with tube feeding. Experiments were performed on eight preterm infants who were tube fed twice--once with and once without sucking of a pacifier. The time for tube feeding was significantly decreased and
gastric retention
decreased in five of seven infants when sucking a pacifier. Maternal milk was found to contain gastrin-17, somatostatin-14, and a
somatostatin
-like peptide larger than somatostatin-28.
Somatostatin
levels were significantly reduced in connection with non-nutritive sucking. Gastrin levels were increased in six of ten experiments 2 h and/or 3 h after bolus feeding, suggesting that these peptides were not only supplied by the milk, but were also released from the gastric mucosa. The presence of gastrin and
somatostatin
in gastric aspirates was established by use of chromatographic methods. The results indicate that
somatostatin
and gastrin are released into the gastric lumen in preterm infants and that sucking of a pacifier, in connection with bolus feeding, stimulates the gastric motor functions and facilitates the digestion process, probably via activation of vagal mechanisms.
...
PMID:Nonnutritive sucking in tube-fed preterm infants: effects on gastric motility and gastric contents of somatostatin. 289 21
1. Secretion of the antral hormone gastrin is increased by protein in the gastric lumen and by nervous reflexes. We have examined the relative importance of luminal and neuronal mechanisms, by lesioning the antral innervation using benzalkonium chloride. 2. Benzalkonium chloride was applied to the serosa of the antrum in anaesthetized rats. In some animals, a stainless-steel cannula was also implanted in the corpus. Animals were allowed 10 days to recover. Plasma gastrin was measured by radioimmunoassay and mRNAs encoding gastrin,
somatostatin
and histidine decarboxylase were measured by Northern blot. 3. Antral denervation was associated with
gastric retention
after fasting, and elevated plasma gastrin (28.4 +/- 7 pM compared with 7.6 +/- 1.0 pM in controls). When fasted control or denervated rats were refed, plasma gastrin increased 3-fold in both cases. A gastrin-releasing peptide antagonist inhibited the post-prandial rise in plasma gastrin in control rats, but had no effect in antrally denervated rats. 4. In fasted, antrally denervated rats with a gastric fistula, basal gastric acid secretion was depressed 3-fold, and plasma gastrin concentrations were similar to controls. 5. Distension of the stomach with peptone via a barostat attached to the gastric cannula (5 cm H2O, 30 min), produced 3-fold increases in plasma gastrin in both control and denervated rats. However, distension with a non-nutrient solution at pH 6.0 had no effect in controls, but increased gastrin to a similar extent to peptone in denervated rats; distension with 50 mM HCl had no effect in either control or denervated rats. 6.
Somatostatin
and gastrin mRNA abundances in the antrum were depressed by about 35% by antral denervation, but
somatostatin
mRNA in the corpus was unchanged; GAPDH mRNA abundance was unaffected by antral denervation. 7. The data suggest that luminal nutrient releases gastrin in the rat, in vivo, via activation of antral neurons secreting gastrin-releasing peptide, and that the antral innervation normally inhibits G-cell responses to non-nutrient distension of the stomach. After antral denervation, gastric distension with a non-nutrient solution is an adequate stimulus for gastrin release.
...
PMID:Increased sensitivity of gastrin cells to gastric distension following antral denervation in the rat. 928 84
Ghrelin is a gut peptide that is secreted from the stomach and stimulates food intake. There are ghrelin receptors throughout the gut and intracerebroventricular ghrelin has been shown to increase gastric acid secretion. The aim of the present study was to examine the effects of peripherally administered ghrelin on gastric emptying of a non-nutrient and nutrient liquid, as well as, basal and pentagastrin-stimulated gastric acid secretion in awake rats. In addition, gastric contractility was studied in vitro. Rats equipped with a gastric fistula were subjected to an intravenous infusion of ghrelin (10-500 pmol kg(-1) min(-1)) during saline or pentagastrin (90 pmol kg(-1) min(-1)) infusion. After administration of polyethylene glycol (PEG) 4000 with 51Cr as radioactive marker, or a liquid nutrient with (51)Cr,
gastric retention
was measured after a 20-min infusion of ghrelin (500 pmol kg(-1) min(-1)). In vitro isometric contractions of segments of rat gastric fundus were studied (10(-9) to 10(-6) M). Ghrelin had no effect on basal acid secretion, but at 500 pmol kg(-1) min(-1) ghrelin significantly decreased pentagastrin-stimulated acid secretion. Ghrelin had no effect on gastric emptying of the nutrient liquid, but significantly increased gastric emptying of the non-nutrient liquid. Ghrelin contracted fundus muscle strips dose-dependently (pD2 of 6.93+/-0.7). Ghrelin IV decreased plasma orexin A concentrations and increased plasma
somatostatin
concentrations. Plasma gastrin concentrations were unchanged during ghrelin infusion. Thus, ghrelin seems to not only effect food intake but also gastric motor and secretory function indicating a multifunctional role for ghrelin in energy homeostasis.
...
PMID:Effect of peripherally administered ghrelin on gastric emptying and acid secretion in the rat. 1604 Jan 40