Abstract

Rodioimmunoassayable somatostatin (SRIF) was found in acid ethanol extracts from various parts of the gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) endocrine system in reptiles, amphibians, teleost bony fish, cartilaginous fish, and jawless fish, as well as in a deuterostomian invertebrate, the tunicate, Ciona intestinalis. The cellular sites could, as a rule, be easily visualized light-microscopically by the peroxidase-anti-peroxidase (PAP) immunocytochemical procedure, using guinea-pig and rabbit antisera against synthetic SRIF. The standard Hellerström-Hellman technique, used to detect argyrophi SRIF-storing D cells, failed to visualize the SRIF cells in teh GEP endocrine system of the tumicate and of the jaw-less fish. Moreover, the results comfirmed the previous description that this technique only exceptionally (and sometimes only after further modifications) gave positive results when applied to the GEP endocrine system of bony fish, amphibians, and reptiles. In cartilaginous fish, however, it worked adequately and confirmed the radio-immunological and immunocytochemical observations. In the mucosa of the alimentary tract and in the parenchyma of its associated glands of one echinoderm and two pelecypod molluscs and one crustacean arthropod no sgns of the occurrence of SRIF-storing cells were observed using the three correlated procedures. In several of these tissues, signs of the occurrence of insulin-producing cells had perviously been observed. Thus, SRIF seems to appear at a later evolutionary stage than insulin. The principal islets (Brockmann corpusles) of the marine teleost fish, Cottus scorpius, had the highest concentrations of radioimmunoassayable SRIF of all the GEP organs and tissues investigated, viz. about 200 ng/mg wet weight. Nevertheless, it was only 1/5 of the actual insulin content.

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