Action of histamine and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine on cAMP activation of protein kinase in dog gastric mucosa

Abstract
Dog gastric mucosa was incubated with histamine, IMX and db-cAMP, and the tissue was analyzed for cAMP content and cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity. Results show that in the absence of IMX, histamine does not produce measurable changes in either cAMP content or protein kinase activity ratios. In the presence of 5×10−5 mol/I IMX histamine elicits a dose-dependent accumulation of cAMP, and this accumulation is reflected in elevated protein kinase activity ratios. When IMX concentration is increased to 5×10−4 mol/l, the histamine effect is more pronounced. Incubation of gastric mucosa with 10−6 mol/l db-cAMP results in elevated cAMP tissue levels both in the absence and presence of IMX, but protein kinase activity ratio is significantly elevated only in the presence of 5×10−4 mol/l IMX. It is concluded that histamlen stimulates cAMP formation and protein kinase activation in dog gastric mucosa, but elevations are detectable only when the phosphodiesterase enzyme is inhibited.