Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Overexpression of glycine-extended gastrin in transgenic mice results in increased colonic proliferation

1999; American Society for Clinical Investigation; Volume: 103; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1172/jci4910

ISSN

1558-8238

Autores

Theodore J. Koh, G.J. Dockray, Andrea Varró, Rachel Cahill, Charles A. Dangler, James G. Fox, Timothy C. Wang,

Tópico(s)

Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology

Resumo

Gastrin is a peptide hormone involved in the growth of both normal and malignant gastrointestinal tissue. Recent studies suggest that the glycine-extended biosynthetic intermediates mediate many of these trophic effects, but the in vivo relevance of glycine-extended gastrin (G-Gly) has not been tested. We have generated mice (MTI/G-GLY) that overexpress progastrin truncated at glycine-72 to evaluate the trophic effects of G-Gly in an in vivo model. MTI/G-GLY mice have elevated serum and colonic mucosal levels of G-Gly compared with wild-type mice. MTI/G-GLY mice had a 43% increase in colonic mucosal thickness and a 41% increase in the percentage of goblet cells per crypt. MTI/G-GLY mice exhibited increased colonic proliferation compared with wild-type controls, with an expansion of the proliferative zone into the upper third of the colonic crypts. Continuous infusion of G-Gly into gastrin-deficient mice for two weeks also resulted in elevated G-Gly levels, a 10% increase in colonic mucosal thickness, and an 81% increase in colonic proliferation when compared with gastrin-deficient mice that received saline alone. To our knowledge, these studies demonstrate for the first time that G-Gly's contribute to colonic mucosal proliferation in vivo.

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