Abstract

Subcutaneous injections of gastrin-17, cholecystokinin-39, cholecystokinin-8 (sulfated and non-sulfated forms), cholecystokinin-4 or pentagastrin induced hypocalcemia in rats. The hypocalcemia was associated with calcitonin release for pentagastrin and the cholecystokinins but not for gastrin-17, even at very high doses. Permanent hypergastrinemia, induced by surgical removal of the acid-producing part of the stomach (fundectomy) or by treatment with high doses of omeprazole, a blocker of acid secretion, was not accompanied by elevated plasma calcitonin. Long-lasting hypergastrinemia is known to cause hyperplasia of gastrin-sensitive endocrine cells in the rat stomach while hypogastrinemia does the reverse. In antrectomized rats, having low serum gastrin, and in fundectomized rats, having high serum gastrin, the serum calcitonin concentration, the thyroid calcitonin content and the number of C-cells remained as in sham-operated controls two months after the operations. We conclude that neither exogenous nor endogenous gastrin stimulates calcitonin secretion in the rat and that long-standing hypo- or hypergastrinemia is without effect on the number of thyroid C-cells. Our results, however, do not exclude the possibility that the cholecystokinins might act as calcitonin secretagogues in the rat although such a role remains to be established.

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