Abstract

Conscious rats with chronic gastric fistula were trained for drinking a 14-ml milk meal. The activity of an intestinal hormone, oxyntomodulin (OXM), was studied in this model and compared to that observed when histamine was the stimulus. Under histamine (0.25 mg·kg −1·h −1) stimulation, OXM at doses (60–120 pmol·kg −1·h −1) that induced physiological circulating levels inhibited gastric acid secretion up to 50%. Under meal stimulation, OXM reduced up to 29% acid secretion at doses (1–1.5 nmol·kg −1·h −1) inducing supraphysiological levels. We conclude that at physiological concentrations OXM cannot counteract the complex processes triggered by a meal. OXM would be a component of enterogastrone, a combination of several intestinal hormones acting in synergy. The OXM action is related to pathways recognizing the C- terminal 19–37 moiety of the molecule.

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