Abstract

The properties of endocrine cells of rat antropyloric mucosa, which simultaneously store both gastrin and ACTH-like immunoreactivity have been examined. In freely fed animals all or nearly all antral gastrin cells contain also large quantities of ACTH-like immunoreactivity. Following three days of fasting the gastrin cell content of ACTH-like peptides is drastically reduced, but increases rapidly upon refeeding of the starved animals for 30 min. At the electron microscopical level, the vast majority of cells storing both gastrin and ACTH-like peptides are identified as G cells but, in addition, a few, previously unrecognized, endocrine cells have also been found to store both types of peptides. The latter new cell type has tentatively been labelled the Ga cell. In normal freely fed animals the G cell is characterized by the occurrence of both electron-dense and electron-lucent granules. Correlative immunocytochemical and ultrastructural studies indicate that gastrin and the ACTH-like peptides are both stored in the cytoplasmic granules. Our results indicate that the gastrin cells release their content of ACTH-like peptides in response to fasting and that this release is blocked by refeeding. The differential release of two hormone-like substances from the same endocrine cell type is of great interest for analysis of mechanisms of peptide hormone release.

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