Cargando…

Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.

Physiological stimuli from inside and outside the stomach coverage on gastric effector neurons that are the primary regulators of acid secretion. The effector neurons comprise cholinergic neurons and two types of non-cholinergic neurons: bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons. The neurons act directly on targ...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schubert, M. L., Makhlouf, G. M.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1992
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2589756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1364124
_version_ 1782161180343664640
author Schubert, M. L.
Makhlouf, G. M.
author_facet Schubert, M. L.
Makhlouf, G. M.
author_sort Schubert, M. L.
collection PubMed
description Physiological stimuli from inside and outside the stomach coverage on gastric effector neurons that are the primary regulators of acid secretion. The effector neurons comprise cholinergic neurons and two types of non-cholinergic neurons: bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons. The neurons act directly on target cells or indirectly by regulating release of the hormone, gastrin, the stimulatory paracrine amine, histamine, and the inhibitory paracrine peptide, somatostatin. In the antrum, cholinergic and bombesin/GRP neurons activated by intraluminal proteins stimulate gastrin secretion directly and, in the case of cholinergic neurons, indirectly by eliminating the inhibitory influence of somatostatin (disinhibition). In turn, gastrin acts on adjacent somatostatin cells to restore the secretion of somatostatin. The dual paracrine circuit activated by antral neurons determines the magnitude of gastrin secretion. Low-level distention of the antrum activates, preferentially, VIP neurons that stimulate somatostatin secretion and thus inhibit gastrin secretion. Higher levels of distention activate predominantly cholinergic neurons that suppress antral somatostatin secretion and thus stimulate gastrin secretion. In the fundus, cholinergic neurons activated by distention or proteins stimulate acid secretion directly and indirectly by eliminating the inhibitory influence of somatostatin. The same stimuli activate bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons that stimulate somatostatin secretion and thus attenuate acid secretion. In addition, gastrin and fundic somatostatin influence acid secretion directly and indirectly by regulating histamine release. Acid in the lumen stimulates somatostatin secretion, which attenuates acid secretion in the fundus and gastrin secretion in the antrum.
format Text
id pubmed-2589756
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1992
publisher Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25897562008-11-28 Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion. Schubert, M. L. Makhlouf, G. M. Yale J Biol Med Research Article Physiological stimuli from inside and outside the stomach coverage on gastric effector neurons that are the primary regulators of acid secretion. The effector neurons comprise cholinergic neurons and two types of non-cholinergic neurons: bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons. The neurons act directly on target cells or indirectly by regulating release of the hormone, gastrin, the stimulatory paracrine amine, histamine, and the inhibitory paracrine peptide, somatostatin. In the antrum, cholinergic and bombesin/GRP neurons activated by intraluminal proteins stimulate gastrin secretion directly and, in the case of cholinergic neurons, indirectly by eliminating the inhibitory influence of somatostatin (disinhibition). In turn, gastrin acts on adjacent somatostatin cells to restore the secretion of somatostatin. The dual paracrine circuit activated by antral neurons determines the magnitude of gastrin secretion. Low-level distention of the antrum activates, preferentially, VIP neurons that stimulate somatostatin secretion and thus inhibit gastrin secretion. Higher levels of distention activate predominantly cholinergic neurons that suppress antral somatostatin secretion and thus stimulate gastrin secretion. In the fundus, cholinergic neurons activated by distention or proteins stimulate acid secretion directly and indirectly by eliminating the inhibitory influence of somatostatin. The same stimuli activate bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons that stimulate somatostatin secretion and thus attenuate acid secretion. In addition, gastrin and fundic somatostatin influence acid secretion directly and indirectly by regulating histamine release. Acid in the lumen stimulates somatostatin secretion, which attenuates acid secretion in the fundus and gastrin secretion in the antrum. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1992 /pmc/articles/PMC2589756/ /pubmed/1364124 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Schubert, M. L.
Makhlouf, G. M.
Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.
title Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.
title_full Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.
title_fullStr Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.
title_full_unstemmed Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.
title_short Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.
title_sort neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2589756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1364124
work_keys_str_mv AT schubertml neuralhormonalandparacrineregulationofgastrinandacidsecretion
AT makhloufgm neuralhormonalandparacrineregulationofgastrinandacidsecretion