RESUMEN
Increasing evidence supports the role of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) in the modulation of gastrointestinal physiology. The effect of ANF on exocrine pancreatic secretion and the possible receptors and pathways involved were studied in vivo. Anesthetized rats were prepared with pancreatic duct cannulation, pyloric ligation, and bile diversion into the duodenum. ANF dose-dependently increased pancreatic secretion of fluid and proteins and enhanced secretin and CCK-evoked response. ANF decreased chloride secretion and increased the pH of the pancreatic juice. Neither cholinergic nor adrenergic blockade affected ANF-stimulated pancreatic secretion. Furthermore, ANF response was not mediated by the release of nitric oxide. ANF-evoked protein secretion was not inhibited by truncal vagotomy, atropine, or Nomega-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester administration. The selective natriuretic peptide receptor-C (NPR-C) receptor agonist cANP-(4-23) mimicked ANF response in a dose-dependent fashion. When the intracellular signaling coupled to NPR-C receptors was investigated in isolated pancreatic acini, results showed that ANF did not modify basal or forskolin-evoked cAMP formation, but it dose-dependently enhanced phosphoinositide hydrolysis, which was blocked by the selective PLC inhibitor U-73122. ANF stimulated exocrine pancreatic secretion in the rat, and its effect was not mediated by nitric oxide or parasympathetic or sympathetic activity. Furthermore, CCK and secretin appear not to be involved in ANF response. Present findings support that ANF exerts a stimulatory effect on pancreatic exocrine secretion mediated by NPR-C receptors coupled to the phosphoinositide pathway.
Asunto(s)
Factor Natriurético Atrial/fisiología , Guanilato Ciclasa/fisiología , Páncreas/efectos de los fármacos , Páncreas/metabolismo , Receptores del Factor Natriurético Atrial/fisiología , Animales , Factor Natriurético Atrial/administración & dosificación , Factor Natriurético Atrial/farmacología , Presión Sanguínea/efectos de los fármacos , Colecistoquinina/fisiología , Electrólitos/metabolismo , Hidrólisis/efectos de los fármacos , Óxido Nítrico/fisiología , Jugo Pancreático/efectos de los fármacos , Jugo Pancreático/metabolismo , Sistema Nervioso Parasimpático/fisiología , Fosfatidilinositoles/metabolismo , Proteínas/metabolismo , Ratas , Ratas Sprague-Dawley , Secretina/fisiología , Sistema Nervioso Simpático/fisiologíaRESUMEN
Swiss mice were fed conventional lab chow and 10% ethanol or water as drinking fluid for 2 weeks. Pancreatic juice was obtained by cannulation of the bile pancreatic common duct of mice anesthetized with urethane. Isolated pancreatic lobules were also obtained. The flow rate and the amylase output were determined in pure pancreatic juice. The release of amylase was measured in pancreatic lobule preparations. The basal pancreatic juice flow rate and the amylase output were significantly increased by ethanol consumption. The magnitude of the pancreatic juice flow rate and the amylase output responses to increasing doses of bethanechol, a cholinergic agent, was significantly decreased in ethanol-fed mice. The amount of spontaneously released amylase was higher in pancreatic lobule preparations from ethanol-fed animals than that from control mice, and the difference was abolished by addition of atropine to the incubation media. The amylase release rate in response to increasing doses of bethanechol was significantly reduced in lobule preparations from the ethanol-fed group. These data indicate that ethanol intake in mice has a stimulating effect on the spontaneous pancreatic secretion and lends support to the hypothesis that ethanol consumption increases the intrapancreatic cholinergic tone.
Asunto(s)
Etanol/farmacología , Jugo Pancreático/metabolismo , Amilasas/metabolismo , Animales , Betanecol , Compuestos de Betanecol/farmacología , Relación Dosis-Respuesta a Droga , Técnicas In Vitro , Masculino , Ratones , Jugo Pancreático/efectos de los fármacosRESUMEN
In nonalcoholic (NA) and alcohol-fed rats (AF), intravenous-ethanol-induced percentage changes in bile-pancreatic-secretion (BPS) were evaluated, with and without gastric juice diversion (GJD) and with and without BPS duodenal recirculation (DR). Even with GJD, ethanol elicited a slight increase in BPS. These changes were greater in AF animals even when performed without GJD. When intravenous ethanol was given under conditions of GJD and DR, there were marked differences between the NA and AF animals in the ethanol-elicited post-plateau percentage changes of BPS. NA animals evidenced no significant difference from controls. But in the AF rats, ethanol triggered a marked and significant increase of flow, protein concentration, and output that became progressively greater in successive collection periods. It is postulated that without DR, and the resulting lack of negative duodeno-pancreatic reflexes (DPR), there occurs a change in reactivity to intravenous ethanol of the hypothalamic-bulbar nuclei (HBN) and in the mechanisms that modulate the flow of cholinergic impulses through the intrapancreatic ganglia (IPG). The postulated consequence is predominance (slight in NA rats receiving intravenous ethanol, greater in AF rats) in discharge of positive impulses from HBN and flowing unimpeded through the IPG to the "pancreon" units. In the NA animal with DR, ethanol may enhance BPS values, but in the AF rats, impairment of the negative DPR elicited by chronic alcohol intoxication might, after an acute intravenous ethanol injection, favor the discharge of positive impulses from the HBN flowing unimpeded through the IPG. In the AF rats also, ethanol would activate the nonnicotinic receptors of the neurons of the "antral," "duodenal," and "celiac" autonomic brains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Asunto(s)
Alcoholismo/fisiopatología , Bilis/metabolismo , Etanol/administración & dosificación , Jugo Gástrico/efectos de los fármacos , Páncreas/metabolismo , Jugo Pancreático/efectos de los fármacos , Animales , Bilis/fisiología , Jugo Gástrico/metabolismo , Inyecciones Intravenosas , Masculino , Páncreas/fisiología , Jugo Pancreático/metabolismo , Ratas , Ratas Endogámicas , Valores de ReferenciaRESUMEN
The secretory effect elicited by the ingestion of 100 ml of orange-lemon juice (O.-L.J.) was studied on pure pancreatic juice obtained from a catheter placed in the human Wirsung duct at surgery. These changes were compared with those evoked by a regular meal (R.M.), the ingestion of a Sorbitol solution (S.S.), the intragastric infusion of an acidified peptone broth (A.P.B.) and an i.v. single injection of secretin (Boots, 1.0 U/kg). The O.-L.J. induced purer pancreatic secretion response (flow, bicarbonate and enzyme output) than that triggered by the R.M., S.S. and A.P.B. The O.-L.J. evoked peak values, were observed earlier (60 min) than with a R.M. (90 min) ingestion. The 120-min-cumulative values confirmed these findings and disclosed that O.-L.J. elicits a rate of secretion and bicarbonate output closely similar to that of an i.v. secretin injection and amylase response greater than that evoked by this hormone. Thus, O.-L.J. ingestion proved to be an unexpected powerful stimulus of exocrine pancreatic secretion.