Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intrahepatic bile duct epithelial cells, or cholangiocytes, contribute to bile secretion in response to hormones, including secretin. However, the mechanism by which secretin stimulates ductular bile flow is unknown. Since recent data in nonhepatic epithelia have suggested a role for exocytosis in fluid secretion, we tested the hypothesis that secretin stimulates exocytosis by isolated cholangiocytes. Cholangiocytes were isolated from normal rat liver by a newly described method employing enzymatic digestion and mechanical disruption followed by immunomagnetic separation using specific monoclonal antibodies, and exocytosis was measured using a fluorescence unquenching assay employing acridine orange. Secretin caused a dose-dependent (10(-12)-10(-7) M) increase in acridine orange fluorescence by acridine orange-loaded cholangiocytes with a peak response at 10 min; the half-maximal concentration of secretin was 7 x 10(-9) M. The secretin effect was inhibited by preincubation of cholangiocytes with colchicine (30% inhibition, p less than 0.05) or trypsin (90% inhibition, p less than 0.001); no inhibition was seen with lumicolchicine and heat-inactivated trypsin. Cholecystokinin, insulin, and somatostatin had no effect on fluorescence of acridine orange-loaded cholangiocytes; secretin had no effect on fluorescence of acridine orange-loaded hepatocytes or hepatic endothelial cells. Exposure of isolated cholangiocytes to secretin at doses that stimulated exocytosis caused a dose-dependent increase in cyclic AMP levels (218% maximal increase, p less than 0.05); moreover, an analogue of cyclic AMP stimulated exocytosis by cholangiocytes. Secretin had no effect on intracellular calcium concentration using Fura-2-loaded cholangiocytes assessed by digitized video microscopy. Our results demonstrate, for the first time, that secretin stimulates exocytosis by rat cholangiocytes. The effect is cell- and hormone-specific, dependent on intact microtubules, on a protein(s) on the external surface of cholangiocytes, and on changes in cellular levels of cyclic AMP. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that secretin-induced changes in bile flow may involve an exocytic process.
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PMID:Secretin stimulates exocytosis in isolated bile duct epithelial cells by a cyclic AMP-mediated mechanism. 132

The fluorescent acridine derivative, quinacrine, was found to accumulate in rat and mouse pancreatic islet cells storing insulin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, or somatostatin. Following administration of large doses of tolbutamide via an oro-gastric tube, the intensity of quinacrine fluorescence of insulin cells was substantially reduced. Similarly, the pancreatic insulin content was lowered. In contrast, the fluorescence intensity of the glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide and somatostatin cells appeared unaffected. Basal plasma insulin levels in the mouse were slightly elevated following quinacrine administration (25%). Glucose-stimulated insulin release was markedly enhanced (51%) in quinacrine-pretreated animals, whereas insulin release induced by cholinergic stimulation was unaffected. The results show that quinacrine accumulates in the various pancreatic islet cells. The drug seems to be confined to the secretory granules and affects the insulin response to glucose but not that to cholinergic stimulation, suggesting that these secretagogues act through different or partly different secretory pathways.
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PMID:Quinacrine accumulation in pancreatic islet cells of rat and mouse: relationship to functional activity and effects on basal and stimulated insulin secretion. 388 58

Although the enterochromaffin (EC) cell is one of the primary neuroendocrine regulatory cells of the small intestine, the lack of a purified cell system has precluded characterization of the cell and limited precise physiological evaluation. We developed methodology to obtain a pure population of Mastomys ileal EC cells, evaluated their functional regulation, and defined the transcriptome. Mastomys ilea were everted, end ligated, pronase-collagenase digested, and Nycodenz gradient centrifuged, and EC cells were collected by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) of acridine orange-labeled cells. Enrichment was confirmed by immunostaining of tryptophan hydroxylase and chromogranin A, specific EC cell markers, serotonin content, EC cell marker gene expression, and electron microscopy. Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), somatostatin, and gastrin receptor expression was determined by real-time RT-PCR. Live post-FACS-sorted cells were cultured, and the effects of forskolin, isoproterenol, acetylcholine, GABAA, PACAP-38, and gastrin on serotonin secretion were measured by ELISA. GeneChip Affymetrix profiling of FACS-sorted cells was undertaken to obtain the EC cell transcriptome. FACS produced a >70-fold enrichment of EC cells with a serotonin content of 240 +/- 22 ng/mg protein. Preparations were 99 +/- 0.7% pure by immunostaining for tryptophan hydroxylase. Vasoactive intestinal peptide/PACAP receptor 1 (VPAC1) and somatostatin receptor 2 were present, whereas PACAP receptor 1 (PAC1) and CCK2 receptors were undetectable. Forskolin, isoproterenol, and PACAP-38 stimulated serotonin secretion at EC50 values of 5 x 10(-10), 4.5 x 10(-10), and 1.2 x 10(-9) M, respectively. Isoproterenol stimulated cAMP levels by approximately 3.5 +/- 0.62-fold vs. unstimulated cells (EC50 of approximately 10(-9) M). Octreotide, acetylcholine, and GABAA inhibited serotonin secretion with IC50 values of 3 x 10(-11), 3 x 10(-10), and 2.9 x 10(-10) M, respectively. Gastrin had no effect on serotonin secretion. The naive EC cell transcriptome revealed highly expressed EC cell marker genes, the absence of marker genes for other small intestinal cell types, and a receptor profile that included cholinergic, adrenergic, dopaminergic, serotoninergic, GABAergic, and prostaglandin receptors. We were able to isolate homogeneous preparations (>99%) of live ileal EC cells and demonstrated regulation of serotonin secretion as well as established the normal EC cell transcriptome. Application of this methodology to normal and diseased human ileum will facilitate the elucidation of the pathophysiology of EC cells.
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PMID:Isolation, functional characterization, and transcriptome of Mastomys ileal enterochromaffin cells. 1645 86