Abstract

Leptin, detected recently in the stomach, is a product of the ob gene released by cholecystokinin (CCK) and plays an important role in the control of food intake but its influence on gastroprotection against the damage caused by noxious agents has not been studied. This study was designed to compare the effects of leptin and cholecystokinin-8 (CCK-8) on gastric mucosal lesions induced by topical application of 75% ethanol or acidified aspirin. Four series of Wistar rats (A, B, C and D) were used to determine the effects of: (A) suppression of prostaglandin biosynthesis by indomethacin (5 mg/kg i.p.); (B) inhibition of nitric oxide (NO)-synthase by nitro- l-arginine methyl ester ( l-NAME) (5 mg/kg i.v.); (C) blockade of sensory nerves by capsaicin (125 mg/kg s.c.) and (D) bilateral vagotomy, on the gastric lesions induced by intragastric (i.g.) application of ethanol with or without pretreatment with CCK-8, a known gastroprotective substance or leptin. CCK-8 (1–100 μg/kg i.p.) and leptin (0.1–50 μg/kg i.p.) dose dependently attenuated gastric lesions induced by 75% ethanol; the dose reducing these lesions by 50% being about 10 μg/kg and 8 μg/kg, respectively. The protective effects of CCK-8 and leptin were accompanied by a significant rise in gastric blood flow (GBF) and luminal NO concentration. Leptin was also effective to attenuate aspirin-induced damage and the accompanying fall in the GBF, whereas CCK-8 dose dependently worsened aspirin damage and failed to influence GBF. CCK (1–100 μg/kg i.p.), given in graded doses, produced a dose-dependent increase in the plasma leptin level and a rise of the expression of ob messenger RNA (mRNA) in gastric mucosa, the maximum being reached at a dose of 100 μg/kg. Pretreatment with CCK-8 (10 μg/kg i.p.) or with 8% peptone, that is known to stimulate CCK release, also produced a significant rise in plasma leptin levels and up-regulation of ob mRNA while reducing significantly the gastric lesions induced by 75% ethanol to the same extent as that induced by exogenous leptin (10 μg/kg i.p.). Indomethacin, which suppressed prostaglandin generation by ∼90%, failed to influence leptin- or CCK-8-induced protection against ethanol, whereas l-NAME attenuated significantly CCK-8- and leptin-induced protection and hyperemia but addition to l-NAME of l-arginine, but not d-arginine, restored the protective and hyperemic effects of both hormones. The ob mRNA was detected as a weak signal in the intact gastric mucosa and in that exposed to ethanol alone but this was further enhanced after treatment with graded doses of CCK-8 or peptone meal applied prior to ethanol. We conclude that: (1) exogenous leptin or that released endogenously by CCK or meal exerts a potent gastroprotective action depending upon vagal activity, and involving hyperemia probably mediated by NO and sensory nerves but unrelated to endogenous prostaglandins; (2) leptin mimics the gastroprotective effect of CCK and probably mediates the protective and hyperemic actions of CCK in the rat stomach.

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