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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Håkanson Rolf) srt2:(1995-1999)"

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1.
  • Andersson, K, et al. (author)
  • Depletion of enterochromaffin-like cell histamine increases histidine decarboxylase and chromogranin A mRNA levels in rat stomach by a gastrin-independent mechanism.
  • 1996
  • In: Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology. - 1502-7708. ; 31:10, s. 65-959
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: Gastrin activates histidine decarboxylase (HDC) and increases HDC and chromogranin A (CGA) mRNA levels in histamine-producing enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells in the rat stomach. We have studied how histamine depletion by subcutaneous infusion of the HDC inhibitor alpha-fluoromethyl-histidine (alpha-FMH) affects how ECL cells respond to hypergastrinemia in terms of HDC and CGA mRNA levels. METHODS: In one experiment rats received alpha-FMH for 24 h. In another experiment rats received alpha-FMH, omeprazole (perorally), or a combination of the two drugs for 10 days. In a third experiment antrectomized rats were treated with alpha-FMH for 48 h. The circulating gastrin level, oxyntic mucosal histamine concentration, HDC activity, and HDC and CGA mRNA levels were determined. RESULTS: alpha-FMH for 24 h increased the HDC and CGA mRNA levels without increasing the serum gastrin concentration. alpha-FMH for 10 days increased the serum gastrin concentration twofold. alpha-FMH + omeprazole resulted in the same serum gastrin concentration as after omeprazole alone (eightfold increase). HDC mRNA levels were higher after alpha-FMH + omeprazole than after omeprazole alone. alpha-FMH alone induced an HDC mRNA level that was similar in magnitude to that observed after omeprazole, although the serum gastrin concentration after alpha-FMH was much lower. In antrectomized rats alpha-FMH increased the HDC and CGA mRNA levels without increasing the serum gastrin concentration. CONCLUSION: ECL-cell histamine depletion will increase mRNA levels for HDC and CGA by a gastrin-independent mechanism, possibly involving abolished histamine autofeedback inhibition.
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2.
  • Andersson, K, et al. (author)
  • Effect of a-fluoromethylhistidine-evoked histamine depletion on ultrastructure of endocrine cells in acid-producing mucosa of stomach in mouse, rat and hamster
  • 1996
  • In: Cell and Tissue Research. - 1432-0878. ; 286:3, s. 84-375
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The oxyntic mucosa of the mammalian stomach is rich in endocrine cells, such as ECL cells, A-like cells, somatostatin cells, D1/P cells and, in some species, enterochromaffin cells. The various endocrine cell types can be distinguished on the basis of their characteristic cytoplasmic granules and vesicles. The ECL cells contain numerous large secretory vesicles and relatively few, small electron-dense granules and small clear microvesicles. We have suggested that in the rat the ECL cells contain most of the gastric histamine with the secretory vesicles as the major histamine storage site in these cells. alpha-Fluoromethylhistidine is an irreversible inhibitor of histidine decarboxylase, the histamine-forming enzyme. We have previously shown that this enzyme inhibitor depletes histamine from the ECL cells in the rat and reduces the number of secretory vesicles in the cytoplasm. In the present study, we have examined whether alpha-fluoromethylhistidine affects the ECL cells in other species and whether it affects other types of endocrine cells in the oxyntic mucosa of the rat. Mice, rats and hamsters were treated with the inhibitor (3 mg/kg per h) via minipumps subcutaneously for 24 h. This treatment lowered the oxyntic mucosal histamine concentration by 65-90% and the number and volume density of the secretory vesicles by 85-95% in the ECL cells of the three species examined. In contrast, the number and volume density of granules and microvesicles were not greatly affected. No evidence was found for an effect of alpha-fluoromethylhistidine on A-like cells, somatostatin cells or D1/P cells of the rat stomach, suggesting that, unlike the ECL cells, they do not contain histamine.
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3.
  • Andersson, K, et al. (author)
  • Gastric acid secretion after depletion of enterochromaffin-like cell histamine. A study with a-fluoromethylhistidine in rats
  • 1996
  • In: Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology. - 1502-7708. ; 31:1, s. 24-30
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: Histamine is thought to play a central role in the regulation of gastric acid secretion. In the rat oxyntic mucosa most of the histamine is synthesized and stored in enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells, and the rest resides in mast cells. The present study examines the role of ECL-cell histamine in the control of acid secretion in the intact, conscious rat. METHODS: Rats were treated with alpha-fluoromethylhistidine (alpha-FMH) to inhibit histamine synthesis. alpha-FMH was given by continuous subcutaneous infusion (3 mg/kg/h) for up to 9 days. An additional oral dose of alpha-FMH (50 mg/kg) was given 2 h before each acid secretion test. Acid secretion was studied in pylorus-ligated rats and in chronic gastric fistula rats stimulated with histamine, gastrin-17, or insulin after 2-6 days of alpha-FMH infusion. RESULTS: Treatment with alpha-FMH lowered oxyntic mucosal histamine synthesis by 80%. From previous observations this is thought to reflect depletion of histamine from the ECL cells. The remaining 20% resides in mucosal and submucosal mast cells, which seem to be resistant to alpha-FMH. Basal acid secretion was inhibited by more than 60% after alpha-FMH treatment and by more than 80% by ranitidine. Histamine-stimulated secretion was unaffected by alpha-FMH and abolished by the histamine H2-receptor antagonist ranitidine. The acid response to gastrin-17 was almost abolished in histamine-depleted rats and abolished by ranitidine. Vagally induced acid secretion (provoked by the injection of insulin or by pylorus ligation) was unaffected by alpha-FMH treatment but abolished by ranitidine and by the muscarinic M1-receptor antagonist pirenzepine. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that gastrin stimulates acid secretion by releasing histamine from ECL cells. Vagally induced acid secretion is also dependent on a histaminergic pathway but not on ECL-cell histamine.
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4.
  • Gagnemo Persson, Rebecca, et al. (author)
  • Chicken parathyroid hormone gene expression in response to gastrin, omeprazole, ergocalciferol, and restricted food intake.
  • 1997
  • In: Calcified Tissue International. - 1432-0827. ; 61:3, s. 210-215
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Treatment with omeprazole, a long-acting proton pump inhibitor of acid secretion, induces hypergastrinemia. In chickens, omeprazole induces growth not only of the acid-producing mucosa (probably reflecting the trophic action of gastrin), but also of the parathyroid glands (hypertrophy + hyperplasia), while suppressing bone density and body weight gain without affecting blood calcium. The first part of the present study was concerned with the effect of omeprazole, ergocalciferol (vitamin D2), and restricted food intake on the gene expression of parathyroid hormone (PTH) in the parathyroid glands of the chicken. Chickens were treated with omeprazole (400 micromol/kg/day, I.M.), food restriction, omeprazole + food restriction, ergocalciferol (250 000 IU/kg/day, S.C.), or ergocalciferol + omeprazole for 5 weeks. The weight gain of the chickens was monitored, and the weights of the parathyroid glands and femurs were determined at sacrifice. PTH mRNA in the parathyroid glands was analyzed by Northern blot. The second part of the study examined the effect of 3 weeks of continuous gastrin infusion (chicken gastrin 20-36, 5 nmol/kg/hour, S.C.) on the expression of PTH mRNA in the parathyroid glands. Omeprazole reduced the body weight and femur density (ash weight per volume) while greatly increasing the weight of the parathyroid glands and the PTH gene expression. Food restriction alone and ergocalciferol alone (at a dose that raised blood Ca2+) were without effect, but food restriction greatly enhanced the omeprazole-evoked increase in parathyroid gland weight and PTH gene expression. Gastrin increased the weight of the parathyroid glands and reproduced the effect of omeprazole on PTH gene expression. Hence, it seems likely that the effect of omeprazole reflects the ensuing hypergastrinemia.
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5.
  • Gagnemo Persson, Rebecca, et al. (author)
  • Rat stomach ECL-cell histidine decarboxylase activity is suppressed by ergocalciferol but unaffected by parathyroid hormone and calcitonin.
  • 1999
  • In: Regulatory Peptides. - 1873-1686. ; 79:2-3, s. 131-139
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The ECL cells are peptide hormone-producing cells, rich in histamine and chromogranin A (CGA)-derived peptides, that operate under the control of gastrin. Gastrin and the ECL cells form a functional unit, the gastrin-ECL-cell axis. The aims of the present study were to examine (1) if calcitonin (CT), parathyroid hormone (PTH) and vitamin D affect the gastrin-ECL-cell axis (by measuring the activity of the histamine-forming enzyme, histidine decarboxylase (HDC), and the expression of HDC mRNA and CGA mRNA in the ECL cells), and (2) if activation of the gastrin-ECL-cell axis affects the parathyroid glands (by measuring plasma PTH and mRNA expression). We also examined the possibility that the oxyntic mucosa harbours vitamin D receptors. Fasted rats received intravenous infusion of PTH and CT with or without gastrin. PTH raised the blood Ca2+ concentration, whereas CT infusion lowered it. Plasma PTH rose in response to CT, while serum gastrin remained unaffected. ECL-cell HDC was activated by gastrin but not by CT and PTH. Five daily subcutaneous injections of large amounts of ergocalciferol raised the blood Ca2+ concentration, while reducing the oxyntic mucosal HDC activity and the expression of HDC and CGA mRNA. The serum gastrin concentration was not affected. The findings are in line with the idea that the gastrin-ECL-cell axis can be suppressed by vitamin D or by vitamin D-dependent mechanisms. Western blot analysis revealed the presence of vitamin D receptor immunoreactivity and reverse transcription PCR detected vitamin D receptor gene expression in the rat oxyntic mucosa. Hypergastrinemia was induced by daily peroral treatment with the H+/K+-ATPase inhibitor, omeprazole, for 2 weeks or by continuous subcutaneous infusion of gastrin for 7 days. Elevated serum gastrin concentration was associated with increased HDC activity and increased HDC and CGA mRNA expression in the oxyntic mucosa. There was no elevation of plasma PTH or PTH mRNA expression in the parathyroid gland.
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6.
  • Håkanson, Rolf, et al. (author)
  • Perturbations in blood Ca2+ do not affect the activity of rat stomach enterochromaffin-like cells.
  • 1996
  • In: Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology. - 1502-7708. ; 31:3, s. 217-221
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: Gastrin stimulates uptake of Ca(2)+ into bone and causes transient hypocalcemia, possibly by releasing a peptide hormone from enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells, which are histamine- and peptidehormone-producing cells in the acid-producing part of the stomach. However, if ECL cells secrete a calciotropic hormone, it is to be expected that their activity is affected by the serum Ca(2)+ concentration.METHODS: Food-deprived male rats were infused with human (Leu)15-gastrin-17 and/or ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid and CaCl(2). The blood Ca(2)+ level was monitored throughout the experiments (3 h), and the serum concentrations of gastrin, parathyroid hormone, and calcitonin were measured at death. The activity of the ECL cells was assessed by measuring the histidine decarboxylase (HDC) activity.RESULTS: Gastrin produced the expected increase in HDC activity, but neither hyper- nor hypo-calcemia affected the RDC activity of either hypo- or hyper-gastrinemic rats.CONCLUSION: Perturbations in blood Ca(2)+ do not seem to affect ECL cells, which is at odds with the view that ECL cells harbor a calciotropic hormone.
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7.
  • Monstein, H J, et al. (author)
  • Cholecystokinin-A and cholecystokinin-B/gastrin receptor mRNA expression in the gastrointestinal tract and pancreas of the rat and man. A polymerase chain reaction study
  • 1996
  • In: Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology. - : Informa UK Limited. - 1502-7708 .- 0036-5521. ; 31:4, s. 383-390
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: Gastrin and cholecystokinin (CCK) are thought to exert trophic effects on the gastrointestinal tract and pancreas. Two types of receptors have been cloned, CCK-A and CCK-B/ gastrin. We have examined the occurrence of CCK-A and CCK-B receptor mRNA in the brain, digestive tract, pancreas, and kidney of the rat and man by Northern blot and reverse transcribed polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). METHODS: Total RNA was isolated from rat tissues and reverse transcribed into cDNA. cDNA from brain, kidney, and pancreas of the rat and man and from human whole stomach were commercially available. Northern blot and a PCR technique based on Taq polymerase-antibody interaction and using CCK-A and CCK-B receptor-specific primers, followed by Southern blot analysis, were the methods used. RESULTS: By means of Northern blots, CCK-A receptor mRNA was detected in rat fundus mucosa and pancreas but not in the remaining GI tract or brain. By means of RT-PCR, CCK-A receptor mRNA was demonstrated in the brain and the mucosa of the fundus, antrum, duodenum, and colon, kidney, pancreas and pancreatic islets. CCK-B receptor mRNA was detected by Northern blot analysis in the brain and the fundus mucosa but not in the rest of the digestive tract and not in the pancreas, pancreatic islets, or kidney. By RT-PCR, expression of CCK-B receptor mRNA could also be detected in antrum mucosa. In man, CCK-A receptor mRNA was detected in the brain, stomach, pancreas, and kidney, whereas CCK-B receptor mRNA was found in the brain, stomach, and pancreas but not in the kidney. Cloning and DNA-sequence analysis of the PCR-amplified rat and human CCK-A and CCK-B receptor DNA fragments, which cover the protein-encoding regions of the intracellular loop C3, showed complete sequence homology as compared with published rat and human sequences. CONCLUSIONS: It appears unlikely that CCK will have effects in the ileum, at least not effects mediated by CCK-A receptors. It also appears unlikely that physiologic concentrations of gastrin in the circulation will promote growth (or exert other effects) in the pancreas, duodenum, ileum, and colon, since CCK-B receptor mRNA is not expressed or is poorly expressed in these tissues.
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8.
  • Salehi, S Albert, et al. (author)
  • Gastrectomy induces impaired insulin and glucagon secretion: evidence for a gastro-insular axis in mice
  • 1999
  • In: Journal of Physiology. - 1469-7793. ; 514:2, s. 579-591
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • 1. Mice were subjected to gastrectomy (GX) or food deprivation (24 h). The release of insulin and glucagon in response to different secretagogues was monitored in vivo and in isolated islets 3-4 weeks after surgery. 2. GX animals responded to glucose with an impaired glucose tolerance and a poor increase in plasma insulin. Islets from GX or food-deprived mice displayed impaired insulin release to high glucose and enhanced glucagon release at low glucose. 3. After GX the insulinogenic index, Delta insulin (microU ml-1)/Delta glucose (mg ml-1), was suppressed by 65% after oral glucose and by 59% after i.v. glucose. The integrated insulin response after oral glucose was reduced by 90% in GX mice. After i.v. glucose the reduction was 67%. 4. Carbachol-induced insulin release in vivo was reduced after food deprivation and exaggerated after GX. Carbachol-stimulated glucagon secretion was suppressed after GX and after food deprivation. A similar pattern was found in vitro. 5. Cyclic AMP activation (by the phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutylmethylxanthine or the adenylate cyclase stimulator forskolin) induced a greater insulin response in GX or food-deprived mice than in sham-operated, fed mice. A similar pattern was found in vitro. The glucagon response was enhanced in vitro but not in vivo. 6. Crude extracts of rat oxyntic mucosa enhanced basal as well as glucose-induced insulin release from isolated islets, whereas glucagon release was markedly inhibited. The effects were dose dependent, the inhibition of glucagon release being achieved at lower concentrations than the potentiation of glucose-induced insulin release. The active principle was inactivated by incubation with trypsin or leucine aminopeptidase. 7. The data suggest that a circulating agent, probably a peptide, from gastric oxyntic mucosa stimulates glucose-induced insulin secretion. It also suppresses glucagon secretion. The GX-evoked impairment of the insulin (and glucagon) response to glucose is partly compensated for by an enhanced insulin response to cholinergic and/or cyclic AMP activation.
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9.
  • Stenström, Mats, et al. (author)
  • Methodologic aspects of computed microtomography to monitor the development of osteoporosis in gastrectomized rats
  • 1995
  • In: Academic Radiology. - 1076-6332. ; 2:9, s. 785-791
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Rationale and Objectives We investigated the methodologic development of computed microtomography (CMT) for monitoring the development of osteoporosis in male Sprague-Dawley rats. Methods Eight rats were gastrectomized and eight rats were sham operated. Femurs, tibias, and tails were prepared, and CMT scans with spatial resolutions of 5–500 μm were made. Bone diameters, bone areas, and moments of inertia were determined from the CMT scans. Optimal slice position and the need for spatial resolution and energy optimization for future in vivo applications were investigated. Results Gastrectomy caused dramatic changes in the bone architecture of the tibia and the femur. The main features were vacuolization of the bone and reduced amounts of compact bone. Although the outer diameters of tubular bones (femur and tibia) were largely unaffected, their inner diameters were greatly increased following gastrectomy. Relative bone area and moment of inertia were greatly reduced. The optimal photon energy was 12 keV. Conclusion It is possible to monitor gastrectomy-evoked changes in bone morphology at various sites in rats using CMT scanning. The changes are suggestive of osteoporosis. By optimizing the energy spectrum and spatial resolution, as well as choosing the proper slice position, it should be possible to keep absorbed doses low enough to avoid acute radiation injury in repeated in vivo measurements.
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10.
  • Wallengren, Joanna, et al. (author)
  • Innervation of the skin of the forearm in diabetic patients: relation to nerve function
  • 1995
  • In: Acta Dermato-Venereologica. - 1651-2057. ; 75:1, s. 37-42
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Complications of diabetes include sensory and autonomic neuropathy. The aim of the present paper was to study the degree of sensory and autonomic neuropathy and correlate these findings with the distribution and density of neuropeptidergic nerve fibers in the skin of the forearm of diabetic patients and healthy controls. We investigated 30 diabetics (24 type 1 and 6 type 2) and compared them with 13 healthy controls. There were no differences between the groups with respect to density and distribution of nerve fibers displaying immunoreactivity to the pan-neuronal marker PGP 9.5 and sensory and parasympathetic neuropeptides (substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide and vasoactive intestinal peptide). By contrast, nerve fibers containing neuropeptide Y, a marker of sympathetic neurons, were reduced in number in the diabetic patients. C-fiber function (measured as the axon-reflex-evoked flare response) became impaired with increasing age in all subjects. The diabetic patients, however, showed a reduced flare compared to age-matched healthy controls. The reduction was particularly prominent in the younger patients (20-50 years). There was a greater reduction of the flare in neuropathic patients than in non-neuropathic patients, but there was no correlation between the degree of functional impairment and the duration of the disease.
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