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Vol. 283, Issue 3, 1043-1050, 1997
Division of Pharmacology and Chemotherapy, Department of Oncology,
University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
Parallel increments of gastric acid and pepsinogen secretion generally
occur after the application of cholinergic stimuli. However, it still
remains to be established whether the changes in acid output associated
with cholinergic stimulation play a role in regulation of the
concomitant peptic secretory activity. In the present study, an
anesthetized rat model was used for the evaluation of pepsinogen
secretion in order to pursue a dual purpose: 1) to assess the relative
functional relevance of direct and acid-dependent control exerted by
cholinergic pathways on pepsinogen output; 2) to characterize the
mechanisms through which changes in acidity within the stomach lumen
may affect the peptic secretory activity of gastric mucosa.
Bethanechol, 2-deoxy-D-glucose or electrical vagal stimulation caused
parallel and atropine-sensitive increments of peptic and acid
secretions. Omeprazole, a selective inhibitor of gastric
H+:K+-adenosintriphosphatase, blocked the
increase in acid but not pepsinogen secretion induced by bethanechol.
However, 2-deoxy-D-glucose or electrical vagal stimulation failed to
increase either pepsinogen or acid secretion in omeprazole-pretreated
rats. When tested in animals pretreated with both omeprazole and
physostigmine (a drug able to prevent the enzymatic breakdown of
vagally released ACh through the blockade of acetylcholinesterase),
2-deoxy-D-glucose or electrical vagal stimulation significantly
increased pepsinogen secretion without affecting acid secretion. In
omeprazole-pretreated rats, perfusion of the gastric lumen with acid
solutions caused a pH-dependent and atropine-sensitive increase in
peptic output only when applied in combination with electrical vagal
stimulation. Functional ablation of capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons
did not modify the gastric secretory responses induced by bethanechol or electrical vagal stimulation. However, after topical application of
lidocaine to the gastric mucosal surface, bethanechol stimulated both
peptic and acid outputs, whereas electrical vagal stimulation only
evoked acid secretion without affecting basal peptic output. The
present results indicate that the activation of muscarinic receptors by
vagally released ACh is not sufficient by itself to stimulate
pepsinogen secretion and that a facilitatory action mediated by acid
secretion is necessary to allow an increment of peptic output in
response to vagal cholinergic stimuli. It is suggested that such
facilitatory input is driven to chief cells by local intramural
reflexes that involve capsaicin-insensitive intrinsic nerves.
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