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Gastric secretion.

Overlapping neural, hormonal, and paracrine pathways finely regulate gastric acid secretion. In rats and guinea pigs, most of the intrinsic neural innervation to the gastric mucosa originates in the myenteric plexus. In contrast, human stomachs have a clearly defined submucosal plexus that contains a variety of transmitters including nitric oxide, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP), substance P, and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP). Although GRP is known to participate in meal-stimulated acid secretion by releasing gastrin in a variety of laboratory animals, recent studies were unable to demonstrate a role for endogenous GRP in meal-stimulated gastrin secretion in humans. Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), a member of the secretin-glucagon-VIP family, has been localized to gastric mucosal neurons and may participate in vagally mediated acid secretion. Two novel peptides, ghrelin and leptin, have been localized to the stomach. Peripheral administration of ghrelin stimulates and of leptin inhibits acid secretion. The binding of secretagogues to parietal cells generates changes in second messengers that regulate the translocation and activation of the proton pump, HK-ATPase. In resting cells, HK-ATPase is contained within cytoplasmic tubulovesicles in an inactive form. At stimulation, the tubulovesicles fuse with the apical canaliculi and the HK-ATPase is incorporated into the apical membrane where it actively pumps H ions in exchange for K. Acute infection with Helicobacter pylori results in hypochlorhydria, whereas chronic infection can cause either hypo- or hyperchlorhydria, depending on the distribution of the infection and the degree of corpus gastritis. Recent studies suggest that inflammatory cytokines, produced in response to the organism, can play a role in the perturbations in acid and gastrin secretion induced by H. pylori.

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