AGI May 39/5
نویسندگان
چکیده
Lacourse, Karen A., Lisa J. Swanberg, Patrick J. Gillespie, Jens F. Rehfeld, Thomas L. Saunders, and Linda C. Samuelson. Pancreatic function in CCK-deficient mice: adaptation to dietary protein does not require CCK. Am. J. Physiol. 276 (Gastrointest. Liver Physiol. 39): G1302– G1309, 1999.—A CCK-deficient mouse mutant generated by gene targeting in embryonic stem cells was analyzed to determine the importance of CCK for growth and function of the exocrine pancreas and for pancreatic adaptation to dietary changes. RIAs confirmed the absence of CCK in mutant mice and demonstrated that tissue concentrations of the related peptide gastrin were normal. CCK-deficient mice are viable and fertile and exhibit normal body weight. Pancreas weight and cellular morphology appeared normal, although pancreatic amylase content was elevated in CCK-deficient mice. We found that a high-protein diet increased pancreatic weight, protein, DNA, and chymotrypsinogen content similarly in CCK-deficient and wild-type mice. This result demonstrates that CCK is not required for protein-induced pancreatic hypertrophy and increased proteolytic enzyme content. This is a novel finding, since CCK has been considered the primary mediator of dietary protein-induced changes in the pancreas. Altered somatostatin concentrations in brain and duodenum of CCK-deficient mice suggest that other regulatory pathways are modified to compensate for the CCK deficiency.
منابع مشابه
AGI Apr. 39/4
J. M. ANDREWS,1 H. NATHAN,2 C. H. MALBERT,3 M. A. M. T. VERHAGEN,4 M. GABB,5 G. S. HEBBARD,1 D. KILPATRICK,6 S. MACDONALD,2 C. K. RAYNER,1 S. DORAN,1 T. OMARI,7 E. O’YOUNG,2 C. FRISBY,2 R. J. FRASER,1 M. SCHOEMAN,2 M. HOROWITZ,1 AND J. DENT2 Departments of 1Medicine, 2Gastrointestinal Medicine, and 5Radiology, Royal Adelaide Hospital, and 7Department of Gastroenterology, Women’s and Children’s ...
متن کاملAGI May 39/5
SAMUEL H. SIGAL,1,3 PANKAJ RAJVANSHI,1,3 GIRIDHAR R. GORLA,1,4 RANA P. SOKHI,1,3 ROMIL SAXENA,5 DAVID R. GEBHARD, JR.,2 LOLA M. REID,1,2,6,7 AND SANJEEV GUPTA1,2,3 1Marion Bessin Liver Research Center, 2Cancer Research Center, and Departments of 3Medicine, 4Radiation Oncology, 5Pathology, and 6Molecular Pharmacology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461; and 7Center for Ga...
متن کاملAGI Apr. 39/4
UTA ECKHARDT,1 ALICE SCHROEDER,1 BRUNO STIEGER,1 MATHIAS HÖCHLI,2 LUKAS LANDMANN,3 RONALD TYNES,4 PETER J. MEIER,1 AND BRUNO HAGENBUCH1 1Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Department of Medicine, University Hospital, CH-8091 Zurich; 2Central Laboratory for Electron Microscopy, University of Zurich, CH-8028 Zurich; 3Department of Anatomy, University of Basel, CH-4000 Basel; and 4D...
متن کاملAGI Apr. 39/4
TSUKASA NOZU,1 VICENTE MARTINEZ,1 JEAN RIVIER,2 AND YVETTE TACHÉ1 1CURE: Digestive Diseases Research Center, West Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Digestive Disease Division, Department of Medicine and Brain Research Institute, University of California School of Medicine, Los Angeles 90073; and 2Clayton Foundation Laboratories for Peptide Biology, Salk Institute for Biological S...
متن کاملResponses to catastrophic AGI risk: a survey
Many researchers have argued that humanity will create artificial general intelligence (AGI) within the next twenty to one hundred years. It has been suggested that AGI may inflict serious damage to human well-being on a global scale (‘catastrophic risk’). After summarizing the arguments for why AGI may pose such a risk, we review the fieldʼs proposed responses to AGI risk. We consider societal...
متن کاملAGI May 39/5
MARK JORDINSON,1 ROBERT A. GOODLAD,2 AUDREY BRYNES,1 PHILIP BLISS,1 MOHAMMAD A. GHATEI,1 STEPHEN R. BLOOM,1 ANTHONY FITZGERALD,1 GEORGE GRANT,3 SUSAN BARDOCZ,3 ARPAD PUSZTAI,3 MASSIMO PIGNATELLI,1 AND JOHN CALAM1 1Imperial College School of Medicine, Division of Investigative Sciences, Hammersmith Hospital, London W12 0NN; 2Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC2A3PX; an...
متن کامل