Abstract

Somatostatin-28-(1–12)-like immunoreactivity (S28(1–12)LI) in brains of Eck fistula dogs, prepared as an experimental model of hepatic encephalopathy, was measured. Significant reductions of S28(1–12)LI were observed in all cortical regions of Eck fistula dogs. The reductions of S28(1–12)LI were significantly correlated with decreases in somatostatin-14-like immunoreactivity (S14LI) in the cortical region. The ratios of S28(1–12)LI to S14LI in all cortical regions were not different between Eck fistula and normal dogs. Additionally, no difference in gel chromatographic profiles of S28(1–12)LI and S14LI was observed between Eck fistula and normal dogs. These results imply that reduced somatostatin immunoreactivity in hepatic encephalopathy may be caused not by altered degradation but by reduced production of prosomatostatin. Our S28(1–12)LI assay system could detect prosomatostatin(1–76) and S28(1–12) and the S14LI system prosomatostatin, S28 and S14. S28(1–12)LI/S14LI ratios in cortex were 0.64–0.83 and these were significantly different from those (1.02–1.36) in thalamus, midbrain and medulla. Relative proportions of prosomatostatin (20%) and S28 (23–24%) in cortex were larger than those (6–7% and 5–7%, respectively) in thalamus, midbrain and medulla. The differential distribution of these molecular forms suggests that processing of prosomatostatin in cortex may be different from that in thalamus, midbrain and medulla.

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