Affiliation:
1. Department of Bioscience and Chemistry, Faculty of Agriculture,Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan.
Abstract
Previously, we demonstrated that, in rats with chronic bile-pancreatic juice (BPJ) diversion, pancreatic enzyme secretion was increased after feeding animals a 25% casein fat-free diet. We determined whether cholecystokinin (CCK) or the cholinergic pathway is associated with the response of pancreatic secretion after protein ingestion in the diverted rats, using a potent CCK antagonist, MK-329 or FK-480, and a cholinergic blocker, atropine. Secretion rates of chymotrypsin and trypsin in the fasting state were very high 7 days after a BPJ diversion, and the hypersecretion of the proteases was markedly reduced with an injection of MK-329, FK-480, or atropine and was further reduced by combined injection of FK-480 and atropine. The lowered secretion of the proteases in CCK-antagonized rats was increased after oral feeding of a protein diet and after a duodenal instillation of some protein sources, especially hydrolysate of guanidinated casein (HGC). The CCK-independent increases by HGC instillation are completely depressed by atropine. In rats treated with only atropine, the lowered secretion tended to be increased by a duodenal instillation of HGC. Increases in secretion after an administration of the protein source in CCK-antagonized rats were not affected by bestatin, an inhibitor of brush-border peptidases. We conclude that the stimulatory effects of dietary protein on the pancreatic enzyme secretion partially do not depend on CCK in chronic BPJ-diverted rats and that the CCK-independent increase is atropine sensitive.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology,Physiology
Cited by
8 articles.
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