Abstract

Chronic stimulation of the antral gastrin cells by elevated antral pH was achieved by fundectomy, antrum exclusion, fundectomy plus antrum exclusion, antrocolic transposition, and vagal denervation plus pyloroplasty. For comparison we studied also the effects of pyloroplasty alone and of portacaval shunting. All operations that elevated the antral pH resulted in high gastrin concentrations in serum. Particularly high concentrations were observed in fundectomized rats. Vagal denervation of fundectomized or antrum excluded rats reduced the serum gastrin concentration slightly compared with the corresponding innervated animals. Portacaval shunting reduced the gastrin concentration in serum. The antral gastrin concentration was raised or unchanged following fundectomy and vagal denervation, and reduced following antrum exclusion, antrum exclusion plus vagotomy, fundectomy plus antrum exclusion, fundectomy plus vagotomy, antrocolic transposition and portacaval shunt. The gastrin cell density in the antral mucosa was raised following fundectomy, vagotomy, and fundectomy plus vagotomy, unchanged following fundectomy plus antrum exclusion and antrocolic transposition, and reduced following antrum exclusion and portacaval shunting. Ultrastructurally the gastrin (G) cells in the excluded antrum and in the antrum of fundectomized rats showed signs of secretory activity in that the granule volume density or the number of granules per unit cytoplasm was lowered. In the fundectomized rats moreover, the endoplasmic reticulum of the G cells was increased, the Golgi area enlarged and the proportion and volume density of electron dense granules greatly increased. The granule profile diameter was not affected by either antrum exclusion or fundectomy. The results on the excluded antrum indicate that elevated antral pH per se is not sufficient to produce gastrin cell proliferation. In the fundectomized rats, where the hyperlasia of antral gastrin cells was considerable, there is the added stimulus of ingested food. In fundectomized plus antrum excluded rats this stimulus is eliminated and no proliferation ensues. The passage of intestinal material, as in the rats subjected to antrocolic transposition, did not elicit gastrin cell proliferation which seems to suggest that the character of the luminal material is important. We propose therefore that gastrin cell proliferation is due to the combined stimulation of high antral pH and passage of food. Vagal innervation is not required.

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