Gastrointestinal secretory, motor, circulatory, and metabolic effects of prosomatostatin.
Open Access
- 1 March 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 78 (3) , 1967-1971
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.78.3.1967
Abstract
This study compares the gastrointestinal effects of somatostatin (SS) and its putative prohormone, prosomatostatin (Pro-SS), a 28-amino acid peptide isolated from the hypothalamus and the gut, in conscious dogs with chronic gastric and pancreatic fistulae. Pro-Ss suppressed the release of serum gastrin, insulin, and pancreatic polypeptide that occurs in response to feeding a meat meal in a manner similar to that seen with SS. However, in contrast to SS, which strongly reduced intestinal blood flow and oxygen consumption and stimulated intestinal motility, Pro-SS, at the doses tested, had no influence on mesenteric circulation, oxygen uptake, and intestinal motility. We conclude that Pro-SS mimics most of the gastrointestinal secretory actions of SS, but does not exhibit the intestinal circulatory, metabolic, and motor effects of SS.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Synthesis and biological actions of prosomatostatin.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1980
- N‐terminally extended somatostatin: The primary structure of somatostatin‐28FEBS Letters, 1980
- Neurohormonal interactions in the stomach and pancreasWorld Journal of Surgery, 1979
- Effect of growth hormone-release inhibiting hormone on hormones stimulating exocrine pancreatic secretion.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1976
- Isolation and structure of somatostatin from porcine hypothalamiBiochemistry, 1976
- Somatostatin: Abundance of Immunoreactive Hormone in Rat Stomach and PancreasScience, 1975
- Effect of vasoactive agents on intestinal oxygen consumption and blood flow in dogs.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1975
- Extended Somatostatin Treatment of a Patient with Bleeding UlcerHormone and Metabolic Research, 1975
- A relation between gastroduodenal muscle contractions and gastric empyting.Gut, 1969
- Gastric secretion in relation to mucosal blood flow studied by a clearance technic.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1966