The factors operating at the apical side of the endocrine cell releasing cholecystokinin (CCK) were investigated using the isolated vascularly perfused rat duodenojejunum. In the protease-free intestinal segment, a 30-min infusion of glucose (280 mM), oleic acid (100 mM), or triglycerides containing short- or long-chain fatty acids did not alter significantly the basal level of portal CCK-like immunoreactivity (CCK-LI), while octanoic acid (100 mM) produced a transient rise of plasma CCK-LI to approximately 250% of basal. Infusion of proteins (5% solutions of ovalbumin or casein) or of a mixture of all amino acids brought about a modest CCK secretion. In contrast, isocaloric amounts of an ovalbumin hydrolysate produced a sharp rise of portal CCK-LI to 530% of basal followed by a well-sustained plateau secretion (420% of basal) until the end of the infusion. An acid casein hydrolysate induced a slightly less pronounced CCK-LI release and was followed in decreasing order by meat, casein, and soybean peptones. Simultaneous infusion of trypsin with ovalbumin or casein hydrolysate reduced by approximately 60% the CCK release induced by peptone alone. This effect was reversed by coinfusion of soybean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI) with the trypsin-peptone mixture. Arterial infusion of tetrodotoxin (10(-6) M) or atropine (10(-5) M) had no significant effect on the trypsin-induced inhibition of peptone-mediated CCK-LI release. Administration of SBTI or camostate alone or in combination with trypsin did not alter basal CCK. Monitor peptide produced a dose-dependent transient rise of portal CCK-LI over the range from 2 to 12 micrograms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The effect of glucocorticoids on the blood-brain barrier (BBB) was studied in rats following a single injection or 3 days of dexamethasone administration. Tracers with a low permeability across the intact endothelium, [14C]sucrose and alpha-[3H]aminoisobutyric acid ([3H]AIB), were simultaneously injected intravenously in untreated rats or in rats treated with dexamethasone. Unidirectional blood-to-brain transfer constants (Ki) in 14 regions of the rat brain were determined. In regions of control brain, average Ki values for AIB and sucrose were approximately 0.0020 and 0.00060 ml g-1 min-1, respectively. The lowest transfer constants were found in caudate nucleus, hippocampus, white matter, and cerebellum. In dexamethasone-treated animals, Ki values for both sucrose and AIB markedly decreased by 30-50% in almost all brain regions. These results indicate that a single injection or 3 days of treatment with dexamethasone causes an apparent reduction in the normal BBB permeability, and dexamethasone may greatly interfere with drug delivery into brain. These observations may have an importance for the administration of drugs in brain disease in the presence of steroids.
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