Hypergastrinemia in response to gastric inflammation suppresses somatostatin

Author:

Zavros Yana1,Rieder Gabriele2,Ferguson Amy3,Samuelson Linda C.4,Merchant Juanita L.124

Affiliation:

1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the Departments of

2. Internal Medicine,

3. Pathology University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 – 0650

4. Physiology, and

Abstract

Hypergastrinemia and a reduction in tissue somatostatin occur in Helicobacter pylori-infected patients. We investigated whether the D cell may be a direct target of gastric inflammation and hypergastrinemia. D cells were quantified by morphometry and flow cytometry in 16-wk-old wild-type (G+/+) and gastrin-deficient (G−/−) mice. Hypochlorhydric G−/− mice were treated with either antibiotics for 20 days or infused with gastrin (G-17) for 14 days. G+/+ mice were made hypochlorhydric by treating them with omeprazole for 2 mo. G−/− mice showed significant inflammation compared with the G+/+ mice, which resolved after 20 days of antibiotic treatment. D cell numbers were not significantly different between G−/− and G+/+ mice. After G-17 was infused, fundic and antral D cell numbers decreased in the G−/− mice. G+/+ animals made hypergastrinemic with omeprazole exhibited decreased D cell numbers. When omeprazole-treated mice were treated with antibiotics alone, elevated plasma gastrin levels returned to baseline and D cell numbers returned to resting levels despite persistent hypochlorhydria. Hypergastrinemia, induced by inflammation, results in decreased D cell numbers. Thus the stomach responds to the presence of inflammation by reducing somatostatin levels, thereby releasing the inhibition on the G and parietal cells to maximize gastric acid output.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology,Physiology

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