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The William B. and Sheila Konar Center for Digestive and Liver Diseases, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York 14642
A
secretin-releasing factor (SRF) was found in canine pancreatic juice
that increases plasma secretin and stimulates pancreatic secretion in
rats, suggesting that a positive feedback mechanism may be involved in
the regulation of pancreatic secretion. In the present study, we
investigated to determine whether or not SRF releases endogenous
secretin and stimulates exocrine pancreatic secretion in conscious
dogs. Fresh pancreatic juice was collected from four dogs by
intravenous administration of secretin at 0.5 µg · kg
1 · h
1
and CCK at 0.2 µg · kg
1 · h.
The juice was boiled for 10 min at 100°C. Experiments were carried
out in phase I of spontaneous cycle of interdigestive pancreatic
secretion. The testing solutions were infused intraduodenally in
separate experiments: NaHCO3
solution (0.1 M, 4.5 ml/min, 60 min), a corn oil (Lipomul, 2 ml/min, 10 min), boiled pancreatic juice (BPJ, 4.5 ml/min, 60 min), and mixture of
BPJ and Lipomul. Pancreatic secretion of fluid and bicarbonate was
significantly increased by either BPJ or a mixture of BPJ and Lipomul
(34- and 31-fold or 41- and 38-fold, respectively). Plasma secretin
level also significantly increased by 164.7 ± 13.4% and 223.1 ± 35.0%, respectively, from basal concentration of 1.7 ± 0.5 pM. In contrast, neither bicarbonate solution nor Lipomul influenced
the plasma secretin level or pancreatic secretion. In addition, when
Lipomul was incubated with BPJ, no fatty acid was produced. Thus the
increased pancreatic secretion in the dog infused with a combination of BPJ and Lipomul was caused by SRF in BPJ, which released endogenous secretin. Moreover, the increases by BPJ of both plasma secretin level
and bicarbonate secretion were completely blocked by intravenous administration of an antisecretin antibody in these dogs. The observations suggest that SRF in pancreatic juice exerts a positive feedback effect on exocrine pancreatic secretion that is mediated by
the release of secretin in the interdigestive state in dogs.
positive feedback; boiled canine pancreatic juice; antisecretin serum; Lipomul
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J. P. Li, T.-M. Chang, D. Wagner, and W. Y. Chey Pancreatic phospholipase A2 from the small intestine is a secretin-releasing factor in rats Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol, August 1, 2001; 281(2): G526 - G532. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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