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1 Department of Physiology and
Biophysics,
We have previously demonstrated that altered
exocrine pancreatic stimulus-secretion coupling is associated with
ovariectomy and chronic estradiol administration. To elucidate possible
mechanisms underlying those effects we examined the ability of chronic
administration of different doses of estradiol to regulate the CCK
signal transduction pathway in isolated rat pancreatic acini. Doses of
estradiol ranging from 0.5 to 119 µg/day were administered to
ovariectomized rats for 18 days. Ovariectomy was associated with
enhanced CCK-stimulated pancreatic amylase release, whereas estradiol
dose dependently decreased the magnitude of CCK-stimulated amylase
release. Ovariectomy was also associated with enhanced CCK receptor
numbers on acinar cell membranes. Estradiol administration was
associated with dose-dependent decreases in CCK receptor numbers.
Neither ovariectomy nor estradiol administration affected CCK
receptor affinity. Moreover, estradiol administration was associated
with increased expression of the
-subunit of the heterotrimeric G
protein Gq/11
(G
q/11). Recent findings (H. Ohnishi, S. A. Ernst, D. I. Yule, C. W. Baker, and J. A. Williams.
J. Biol. Chem. 272: 16056-16061,
1997) demonstrate that G
q/11
may exert a tonic inhibitory effect on pancreatic enzyme release. In
view of these findings, the increased expression of
G
q/11 induced by estradiol
likely contributes to the inhibition of pancreatic enzyme release. We
conclude that the effect of estradiol to decrease pancreatic secretion
is mediated through regulation of CCK receptor density and
G
q/11 expression.
pancreas; amylase; cholecystokinin-A receptors; G proteins
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