gi hormone maneerat chayanupatkul, md.cu. department of physiology

97
GI hormone GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Upload: jasmine-phelps

Post on 16-Jan-2016

224 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

GI hormoneGI hormone

Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU.

Department of Physiology

Page 2: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Regulation of GI function• Endocrine regulation : EEC

secretes regulatory peptide or hormones that travel via blood stream to remote target organ. Ex gastrin, secretin

• Paracrine regulation : regulatory peptide secreted by EEC acts on a nearby target cell by diffusion through interstitial space. Ex histamine, 5-HT

Page 3: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Regulation of GI function• Autocrine : regulatory peptide

secreted by the cells acting on themselves ex. TGF-α, β potentiate differentiation of crypt cell to villi cell

• Juxtacrine : 1 regulatory peptide acts on many target cells

• Neurocrine : through nerves and neurotransmitters

Page 4: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

endocrine

paracrine

neuronal

Page 5: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Hormone/peptide neurocrine endocrine paracrine

VIP +Substance P +Neuropeptide +Somotostatin + + +Cholecystokinin + +Gastrin +Secretin +GIP +Motilin + +Neurotensin ? + +Guanylin + +

Page 6: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Enteroendocrine cell (EEC)• Hormone-secreting cells in the mucosa

of stomach, small intestine, colon

• May produce 1 hormone : G cell, S cell

• Produce 5-HT & hormones : enterochromaffin cell

• Produce amine or polypeptide : neuroendocrine cell (APUD: Amine Precursor Uptake and Decarboxylase)

Page 7: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

• Have 2 types

• Open-type : apical membrane contact with GI lumen (receptor), secretion occurs in basolateral membrane ex. G cell

• Closed-type : No contact with luminal surface ex. Enterochromaffin-like cell (ECL) which secretes histamine

Enteroendocrine cell (EEC)

Page 8: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

GI hormones• Classified by similarity in structure

and function

1. Gastrin family : gastrin, CCK

2. Secretin family : secretin, glucagon, glicentin, VIP, GIP

3. Others (not fit in either family) : motilin, substance P, GRP, guanylin

Page 9: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Gastrin • Produced by G cell in the mucosal

gland of gastric antrum and duodenum

• Can be found in fetal pancreatic islet, hypothalamus, medulla oblongata, vagus n. (unidentified function)

Page 10: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Structure of gastrin• Polypeptide hormone with multiple

forms

1. Macroheterogenity : diff in length of peptide chain

2. Microheterogenity : diff on derivatization of amino acid residues

ex. Sulfation of tyrosine (6th aa residue from C-terminal), amidation of the C-terminal phynylalanine

Page 11: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Structure of gastrin• Preprogastrin (101 aa) is processed

into 3 fragments

1. G34 : 34 aa secreted mainly by duodenal G cell

2. G17 : 17 aa secreted mainly by antral G cell

3. G14 : 14 aa

All forms have the same C-terminal configuration

Page 12: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Structure of gastrin

Page 13: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Gastrin • Different forms, different activity,

different tissues that are found

• G17 : principal form of gastric acid secretion (more active and more amount than G34)

• t1/2 : G14, G17 2-3 min in blood. G34 15 min

• Inactivated in kidney, small bowel

Page 14: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of gastrin• Stimulation of gastric acid and pepsin

secretion

• Stimulation of mucosal growth in stomach, SB, colon (trophic action)

• Stimulation of gastric motility

• Release of histamine from ECL cell

• Stimulate insulin secretion after protein meal (not CHO)

• +/- constriction of LES

Page 15: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 16: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Regulation of gastrin secretion• ↑ gastrin secretion

• Luminal : peptide, aa (Phy, Tryp), gastric distention

• Neural : vagal stimulation via GRP (can’t be blocked by atropine)

• Blood : Ca, epinephrine

• ↓ gastrin secretion

• Luminal : acid, somatostatin

• Blood : secretin, GIP, VIP, glucagon, calcitonin

Page 17: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 18: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Feedback inhibition of gastrin• Acid in antrum inhibit gastrin

secretion by 2 ways

1. Direct action on G cell

2. Stimulate release of somatostatin by D cell

• In condition which parietal cells are damaged, pernicious anemia, gastrin level is elevated.

Page 19: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Cholecystokinin-Pancreozymin (CCK)• Also shows macro- and

microheterogenity Prepro-CCK is processed into several fragments

• CCK58, CCK39, CCK33, CCK22 ,CCK12, CCK8

• Every forms has the same 5 aa at C-terminal as gastrin

• Every forms has amidation of C-terminal, sulfation of 7thtyrosine from C-terminal

Page 20: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 21: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

CCK• Secreted by I cell in duodenum and jejunum

• Also found in nerves in distal ileum and colon, neurons in brain (regulation of food intake)

• CCK8, CCK22, CCK33 : principal circulating forms secreted in response to meal

• Enteric & pancreatic nerve : CCK4

• Brain : CCK8, CCK58

Page 22: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of CCK• Gall bladder contraction, sphincter of

Oddi relaxation

• ↑ pancreatic enzyme secretion

• Augment effect of secretin in producing alkaline pancreatic juice

• ↓ gastric emptying

• Trophic effect on pancrease

Page 23: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of CCK• ↑ secretion of enterokinase

• ↑ motility of small intestine and colon

• Augment contraction of pyloric sphincter (↓ duodenal reflux)

• ↑ glucagon secretion (work with gastrin)

• Induced satiety by acting through hypothalamus

Page 24: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Mechanism of action• Through CCK receptor (2 type)

1. CCK-A : locates in periphery, brain

2. CCK-B : locates in brain

• CCK bind to receptor activate phospholipase C → IP3, DAG → ↑ intracellular Ca → activate protein kinase → release of granule (pancreatic enzyme)

Page 25: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

• CCK also stimulate vagus nerve to pancrease (via CCK-A receptor) → release of Ach, GRP, VIP → fusion of granule with membrane and release of pancreatic enzyme

• Gastrin receptor is very similar to CCK-B receptor.

Mechanism of action

Page 26: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Mechanism of action

Page 27: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Control of CCK secretion• Most potent stimulator of CCK release is

lipid

• Peptones, amino acid also increase CCK release but CHO has little effect.

• Also secreted in response to CCK-releasing factor

• Positive feedback : CCK → enzyme release → more digestive products → more CCK (stop when digestive products move to next part)

Page 28: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

CCK-releasing peptide & monitor peptide

• CCK-RP is secreted from duodenal mucosa, and monitor peptide by pancreatic acinar cell

• Secreted in response to fat, protein digestive products, and also to neural input (cephalic phase)

• Match the release of CCK, pancreatic enzyme and the need for enzyme to digest foods

• These peptides are degraded by pancreatic trypsin (if there are proteins in duodenum, these peptides won’t be degraded and CCK will be released )

Page 29: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 30: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Secretin • 27 amino-acid polypeptide

• Secreted by S cell located deeply in the mucosal gland of duodenum and jejunum

• Similar structure with glucagon, VIP, GIP

• Only 1 form has been isolated

• t1/2 : 5 min

• Stored in an inactive form (prosecretin)

Page 31: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of secretin• Most potent humoral stimulator of fluid

and HCO3 secretion by pancrease

• Acts in concert with CCK, Ach to stimulate HCO3 secretion

• ↑ HCO3 secretion by duct cells of pancrease and biliary tract→ ↑secretion of a watery, alkaline pancreatic juice

• Acting through cAMP

Page 32: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

• ↑ pancreatic enzyme secretion (augment CCK)

• ↓ gastric acid secretion

• Pyloric sphincter contraction

• Stimulate growth of exocrine pancrease (work with CCK)

Action of secretin

Page 33: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Mechanism of action

Page 34: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of secretin & CCK in pancrease

Page 35: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Effect of secretin on bile secretion• Produce a watery bile rich in HCO3

• Activate via cAMP → stimulate CFTR (Chloride channel) and Cl– HCO3 exchanger

• Work in concert with glucagon, VIP

Page 36: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of secretin in bile secretion

Page 37: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Effect of secretin and CCK in bile secretion

Page 38: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Control of secretin secretion• Secretin is secreted in response

to protein digestive products, bile acid, fatty food and increased acidity in duodenal content (pH< 4.5-5)

• Inhibited by somatostatin and Met-enkephalin

• Secretin release may be mediated by secretin-releasing peptide

Page 39: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 40: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP)• 42 amino-acid polypeptide

• Produced by K cell in duodenal and jejunal mucosa

• Stimulated by glucose and fat in duodenum, acid in stomach

• Inactivated by dipeptidyl-peptidase IV (DPP-IV)

in many tissues and in portal circulation

Page 41: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of GIP• Mild effect in decreasing gastric motility

• Inhibit gastric acid secretion by directly inhibit parietal cells or indirectly inhibit gastrin release from antral G cells (via somatostatin)

• Stimulate insulin release from pancreatic islet in response to duodenal glucose and fatty acid

Oral glucose can stimulate larger amount of insulin release than IV glucose

Page 42: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Enteric factors increasing insulin release

• CCK, GIP, GLP-1, Glucagon

• GIP is also called glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide by this action

• GLP-1 is more potent than GIP (limited study)

• GIP, GLP-1 act via protein kinase A pathway (increased cAMP and cytosolic calcium)

Page 43: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 44: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Glucagon-Like Peptide 1 (GLP-1)• 30 amino-acid polypeptide

• Incretin hormone : intestinal hormone secreted in response to nutrient ingestion which potentiate glucose-induced insulin release

• Produced by L cell in ileum and colon, pancreatic alpha cell, neurons in hypothalamus, pituitary gland

• 2 bioactive forms : GLP-1[7-36] amide , GLP-1[7-37] both forms are equipotent, same t1/2

Page 45: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

GLP-1• Derivative of glucagon

Page 46: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of GLP-1

Page 47: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 48: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Glucagon • Produced by alpha cell of pancreatic

islet

• Action :

• Increase glycogenolysis

• Increase gluconeogenesis

hyperglycemia

Page 49: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Glicentin • 69 amino-acid polypeptide derived

from proglucagon

• Secreted from L cell along with GLP-1 and GLP-2

• Action : stimulation of insulin secretion, inhibit gastric acid secretion, regulation of gut motility, stimulation of intestinal growth

Page 50: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)• 28 amino-acid polypeptide

• Found in ENS neurons (both myenteric and submucosal plexus), brain, autonomic nerves

• Released in response to esophageal and gastric distention, vagal stimulation, fatty acid and ethanol in duodenum

• Amino acid and glucose don’t affect VIP release

• Half life 2 min in circulation

Page 51: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of VIP• ↑ secretion of E’lyte and water from small

bowel

• Intestinal circular smooth ms relaxation

• Longitudinal smooth muscle contraction

• ↑ pancreatic secretion

• Inhibit gastric acid secretion and motility

• Potentiate axn of Ach in salivary gland

• VIPoma : presented with profused diarrhea

Page 52: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Motilin • 22 amino-acid polypeptide

• Secreted by enterochromaffin cell and M cell in duodenum, jejunum

• Acts on G-protein coupled receptor on enteric neurons in stomach, duodenum → GI tract smooth muscle contraction

• Its circulating level increased at interval of 90-100 mins in the interdigestive state

Page 53: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Motilin • Major regulator of MMCs (Migrating

Motor Complex) that move through the stomach and small intestine every 90 mins in fasted person

• Motilin secretion is inhibited after ingestion

• Vagal nerve may play some role in motilin secretion

• Erythromycin bind to motilin receptor → ↑ GI motility in constipated person

Page 54: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Somatostatin • Growth hormone inhibitory hormone

(GH-IH)

• First found in hypothalamus

• Secreted by D cell in stomach, duodenum, pancreatic islet

• Secreted in larger amount into gastric lumen > circulation

• Released in response to acid in stomach

Page 55: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

somatostatin• Presented in 2 forms

1. Somatostatin 14 : prominent in hypothalamus

2. Somatostatin 28 : prominent in GI tract

• Acts through G-protein couple receptor (inhibit adenylate cyclase)

Page 56: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Action of somatostatin• Inhibit secretion of gastrin, VIP, GIP, secretin,

motilin, GH, insulin, glucagon

• ↑ fluid absorption and ↓ secretion from intestine

• ↓ endocrine and exocrine pancreatic secretion

• ↓ bile flow and gall bladder contraction

• ↓ gastric acid secretion and motility

• ↓ absorption of glucose, amino acid, triglyceride

Page 57: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Other GI hormones

Page 58: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 59: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Neurotensin • 13 amino-acid polypeptide

• Produced by neuron and endocrine cell in ileal mucosa

• Released in response to fatty food

• Action : inhibit GI motility, ↑ intestinal blood flow, ↓ gastric acid secretion

Page 60: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Substance P• 11 amino-acid polypeptide

• Found in myenteric and submucosal plexus and endocrine cell in GI tract

• Stimulated by distention of GI tract

• ↑ GI motility (potent spasmogenic effect on GI smm by direct action on smm or indirect via Ach- releasing myenteric neurons)

• ↓ HCO3 secretion

• ↑ intestinal blood flow (vasodilatation)

Page 61: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Gastrin releasing peptide (GRP)• 27 amino-acid polypeptide

• Released by vagal nerve endings

• Stimulate gastrin release from G cell

Page 62: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Bombesin • Presented in vagal nerve endings

• Stimulate gastrin release from G cell

Page 63: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Guanylin • 15 amino-acid polypeptide

• Secreted by paneth cells in the crypts of Lieberkuhn of small bowel and colon

• Acts via C-type guanylyl cyclase → ↑ cGMP → ↑CFTR → ↑ Cl secretion through Cl channel into small intestine

• Mostly act in paracrine fashion

Page 64: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Guanylin • Heat stable enterotoxin of E.coli has

very similar structure to guanylin → activates guanylin receptor in small bowel → diarrhea

• Guanylin receptor also found in kidney, liver, female reproductive tract → regulate fluid movement in these tissues

Page 65: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Enkephalin • 5 amino-acid oligopeptide

• Secreted from myenteric plexus

• 2 forms : Met-enkephalin, Leu-enkephalin

• Stimulated by GI distention

• Action : control GI peristalsis, ↓ intestinal fuild secretion, inhibit release of Ach, substance P (anti-diarrhea effect)

Page 66: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Pancreatic polypeptide• Secreted by PP cell in pancreatic

islet

• Released in response to vagal stimulation, gastric distention, fat/amino acid/glucose in SB

• Action : decrease pancreatic enzyme and HCO3 secretion

Page 67: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Peptide YY (PYY)• Produced by L cell in ileum, colon

• Secreted in response to fatty acid, glucose, hydrolyzed protein

• Action : ↓ vagally mediated gastric acid secretion, gastric emptying

↓ pancreatic enzyme and fluid secretion by inhibiting neural pathway to pancrease and ↓ pancreatic blood flow

↓ intestinal motility, food intake

Page 68: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Neuropeptide Y• 36 amino-acid polypeptide (PP family)

• Found in CNS, postganglionic SANS, myenteric plexus

• Action : - vasoconstriction (↓blood flow)

- inhibit fluid/E’lyte secretion from SB

- inhibit pancreatic secretion

- ↓ GI motility

- stimulate feeding

Page 69: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Effect of GI hormones on feeding• Suppression of feeding (anorexigenic effect)

• CCK : released in response to fat in duodenum causing activatiob of melanocortin in hypothalamus → ↓ food intake

• PYY : secreted by cells in ileum and colon in response to calories and composition of food intake (esp. fat meal) → ↓ food intake by unknown mechanism

• GLP-1 : enhance insulin secretion → ↓ appetite

Page 70: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

• Increased feeding (orexigenic effect)

• Ghrelin

• Neuropeptide Y

Effect of GI hormones on feeding

Page 71: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 72: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 73: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Ghrelin • 28 amino-acid polypeptide

• Secreted by oxyntic cell in gastric fundus

• Can be found in pancrease, intestine, hypothalamus, pituitary gland

• Is first produced as preproghrelin (117 amino acids)

Page 74: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Structure of ghrelin• 28 amino acids

• n-octanoyl contacts to third serine from N-terminal (important for hormone activity)

• Bind to GH-secretgogue-receptor 1a (GHS-R1a)

• G-protein coupled receptor

Page 75: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Ghrelin structure

Page 76: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Factors influencing ghrelin secretion• Food intake

• Most important

• Ghrelin level increases 1-2 hr prior to meal, max just before eating and decreases dramatically within 1 hr after meal

• Degree of ghrelin level decrease is in proportion with calories and composition of food (CHO can decrease ghrelin > fat)

Page 77: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

• Glucose, lipid, amino acid

• Ghrelin ↓ in postprandial hypoglycemia or after administration of IV glucose/fat diet

• High protein diet, essential amino acid →↑ ghrelin →↑ GH (controversial)

Factors influencing ghrelin secretion

Page 78: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Factors influencing ghrelin secretion• ↑ ghrelin

• leptin

• Fasting

• GHRH, thyroid hormone

• Testosterone

• Sleep

• Lean people/ low BMI

• Anorexia nervosa

• ↓ ghrelin

• Food intake

• Glucose/lipid

• Insulin

• Somatostatin

• PYY/PP

• Obese people/high BMI

Page 79: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Physiological roles of ghrelin• Hormonal effect

• Stimulation of GH secretion

• Synergistic of GHRH

• ↓ somatostatin secretion from hypothalamus

• ↑ ACTH, PRL, cortisol

Page 80: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

• Appetite

• Acting at arcuate nucleus by stimulation of NPY/AGRP neurons (neuropeptide Y/ Agouti-related peptide) →↑ appetite (orexigenic effect)

Physiological roles of ghrelin

Page 81: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 82: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

• Gastric effects

• ↑ gastric acid secretion and motility (acting through vagus nerve which also has GHS-R1a receptor)

Physiological roles of ghrelin

Page 83: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Other effects of ghrelin• Inhibit proinflammatory cytokin (IL-

1, IL-6, TNF)

• Increase bone mineral density

• Decrease MAP by decreasing peripheral vascular resistance

Page 84: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology
Page 85: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Possible clinical application of ghrelin

Page 86: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Orexins/hypocretins• Neuropeptides synthesized by neurons

in posterolateral hypothalamus

• Derived from prepro-orexin (131 aa)

• Orexin A : 33 aa, N-terminal pyroglutamyl residue, 2 intrachain disulfide bonds

• Orexin B : linear 28 aa

• Only orexin A can pass BBB

Page 87: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Orexin receptor• Mediated via G protein couple

receptor

• OxR1 (selective for orexin A) amd OxR2 (bind to both orexin A, B)

• Distributed in hypothalamus, thalamus, brainstem (locus ceruleus), spinal cord, GI tract, pancrease, genital tissues

Page 88: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Role of orexin in feeding• Orexin neurons in lateral

hypothalamus connect and stimulate NPY-, AGRP- neurons in arcuate nucleus stimulate food intake

• Orexin neurons are stimulated by starvation and hypoglycemia, and inhibited by feeding (via vagal sensory pathway and NTS)

• Also plays an important role in regulation of metabolic rate

Page 89: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Tumors of EEC• 50% gastrinoma (presented with

Zollinger-Ellison syndrome)

• 25% glucagonoma

• Others : VIPoma, neurotensinoma

Page 90: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Zollinger-Ellison syndrome• Triad of gastrinoma,

hypergastrinemia, severe peptic ulcer disease

• Gastrinoma can occur in duodenal wall (more common), pancrease

• S&S : PU refractory to treatment, multiple ulcers, ulcers in distal part duodenum, jejumun, GERD, diarrhea, steatorrhea, weight loss, vitamin B12 malabsorption

Page 91: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Glucagonoma • Pancreatic tumor (benign/malignant)

• S&S : 4D syndrome Diabetes(hyperglycemia), Dermatitis (necrolytic migratory erythema ), DVT (Factor X from tumor cells), Depression, diarrhea, weight loss

Page 92: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Summation of GI hormone

Page 93: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Hormone Source Target ActionCholecystokinin

I cell in duo, jeju, neurons in ileum, colon

Pancrease

gallbladder

↑enz secretion

↑contraction

GIP K cell in duo, jeuju

pancrease ↓fluid absorp

↑insulin release

Gastrin G cell in antrum, duo

Parietal cell ↑acid secretion

↑motility

GRP Vagus nerve G cell Gastrin release

Page 94: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Hormone Source Target ActionGlucagon Alpha cell in

pancreatic islet

liver ↑glycogenolysis

↑gluconeogenesis

Guanylin Ileum, colon Small and large intestine

↑fluid secretion

Motilin EC cell, Mo cell in upper GI tract

Eso sphincter

Stomach, duo

Smooth muscle contraction

Neurotensin Neurons, ECC in ileum

Intestinal smooth muscle

↓ GI motility

↑ blood flow

Page 95: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Hormone Source Target ActionPeptide YY L cell in

ileum, colonStomach

Pancrease

↓ vagal mediated acid secretion

↓ enz and fluid secretion

Secretin S cell in small intestine

Pancrease

Stomach

↑HCO3 and fluid secretion by pancreatic ducts

↓ gastric a secretion

somatostatin D cell in stomach , duodenum, pancreatic islet

Stomach

Intestine

Pancrease

Liver

↓ gastrin release

↑fluid absorption

↑smm contraction

↓endo/exocrine secretion

↓bile flow

Page 96: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Hormone Source Target Action

Substance P Enteric neurons

Intestine

Pancrease

↑GI motility

↓HCO3 secretion

VIP ENS neurons Small intestine

Pancrease

smm contraction

↑SB secretion

↑pancreatic secretion

Page 97: GI hormone Maneerat Chayanupatkul, MD.CU. Department of Physiology

Thank you for your attention