Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Nassau County Medical Center, East Meadow, NewYork 11554.
Abstract
We measured cholecystokinin (CCK) in pancreatic duct secretions (PDS) after infusion of different amounts of CCK-8 (the C-terminal octapeptide of cholecystokinin) into rats. Injection of 23, 46, and 92 ng of CCK-8 increased immunoreactive cholecystokinin in PDS by 3-, 13-, and 28-fold above basal levels within 30 min. Continuous intravenous infusion of CCK-8 (50 ng/min) into rats for 30 min, followed by a 30-min rest period, and then a final infusion of peptide for another 30 min increased CCK in PDS only during the final period by 12-fold to 500 pg/30 min. Neither gastrin nor oxidized CCK-8 were detected in PDS after intravenous infusion of each peptide. Administration of proglumide (ip), a CCK receptor antagonist, during continuous CCK infusion significantly reduced immunoreactive CCK levels in PDS to 2% of the control group (P less than or equal to 0.01). CCK was also rapidly internalized into dispersed pancreatic acinar cells in a temperature-dependent fashion, and this process was inhibited by proglumide. The above data suggest that CCK in PDS reflects a peptide-specific process that is receptor mediated. We propose that circulating cholecystokinin binds to specific receptors on pancreatic acinar cells, is internalized, and is then secreted into pancreatic duct fluid.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology,Physiology
Cited by
13 articles.
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