Pharmacological aspects of acid secretion
- 1 February 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Digestive Diseases and Sciences
- Vol. 40 (S2) , 3S-23S
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02214869
Abstract
The secretion of gastric acid is regulated both centrally and peripherally. The finding that H2-receptor antagonists are able to reduce or abolish acid secretion due to vagal, gastrinergic, and histaminergic stimulation shows that histamine plays a pivotal role in stimulation of the parietal cell. In the rat, the fundic histamine is released from the ECL cell, in response to gastrin, acetylcholine, or epinephrine, and histamine release is inhibited by somatostatin or by the H3-receptor ligand, R-α-methyl histamine. The parietal cell has a muscarinic, M3, receptor responsible for [Ca]i regulation. Blockade of muscarinic receptors by atropine can be as effective as H2-receptor blockade in controlling acid secretion. However, general effects on muscarinic receptors elsewhere produce significant side effects. The different receptor pathways converge to stimulate the gastric H+, K+-ATPase, the pump responsible for acid secretion by the stomach. This enzyme is an α,β heterodimer, present in cytoplasmic membrane vesicles of the resting cell and in the canaliculus of the stimulated cell. It has been shown that acid secretion by the pump depends on provision of K+Cl− efflux pathway becoming associated with the pump. As secretion occurs only in the canaliculus, this K+Cl− pathway is activated only when the pump inserts into the canalicular membrane. Transport by the enzyme involves reciprocal conformational changes in the cytoplasmic and extracytoplasmic domain. These result in changes in sidedness and affinity for H3O+ and K+, enabling active H+ for K+ exchange. The acid pump inhibitors of the substituted benzimidazole class, such as omeprazole, are concentrated in the canaliculus of the secreting parietal cell and are activated there to form sulfenamides. The omeprazole sulfenamide, for example, reacts covalently with two cysteines in the extracytoplasmic loops between the fifth and sixth transmembrane and the seventh and eighth transmembrane segments of the α subunit of the H+,K+-ATPase, forming disulfide derivatives. This inhibits ATP hydrolysis and H+ transport, resulting in effective, long-lasting regulation of acid secretion. Therefore, this class of acid pump inhibitor is significantly more effective and faster acting than the H2 receptor antagonists. K+ competitive antagonists bind to the M1 and M2 transmembrane segments of the α subunit of the acid pump and also abolish ATPase activity. These drugs should also be able to reduce acid secretion more effectively than receptor antagonists and provide shorter acting but complete inhibition of acid secretion.This publication has 120 references indexed in Scilit:
- Desensitization of the isolated .beta.2-adrenergic receptor by .beta.-adrenergic receptor kinase, cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and protein kinase C occurs via distinct molecular mechanismsBiochemistry, 1992
- Muscarinic responses of gastric parietal cellsThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1991
- The β‐subunit of the gastric H+/K+‐ATPase can occur without the α‐subunitFEBS Letters, 1990
- Increased epidermal growth factor receptors in gastric carcinomasGastroenterology, 1990
- Effect of Omeprazole and Ranitidine on Ulcer Healing and Relapse Rates in Patients with Benign Gastric UlcerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- cDNA cloning and sequence determination of pig gastric (H+ + K+)-ATPaseBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1988
- Irreversible inactivation of rat gastric (H+-K+)-ATPase invivo by omeprazoleBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1985
- Kinetic properties of the KCl transport at the secreting apical membrane of the oxyntic cellThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1983
- Comparison of the effect of PGE2 and somatostatin on histamine stimulated14C-aminopyrine uptake and cyclic AMP formation in isolated rat gastric mucosal cellsInflammation Research, 1983
- The localization of a histamine H2-receptor adenylate cyclase system in canine parietal cells and its inhibition by prostaglandinsInflammation Research, 1978