Total antral gastrin and somatostatin cell populations as well as their relative distribution pattern throughout the antrum were studied in rats with advancing age from birth time to old age. Both endocrine cell populations were estimated, after staining by immunoperoxidase technique, with a quantitative method using serial parallel strips from entire stomachs. Gastrin cells were regularly found at less than 1 h of post-natal life, but were few in number (447 +/- 82) cells. Somatostatin cells, not seen at birth, were observed in all rats at seven post-natal days; then they increased in number less rapidly but more regularly than gastrin cells. During the normal adult period, corrected gastrin cell population corresponds to about 330,000-500,000 cells and corrected somatostatin cell populations to about 130,000-200,000 cells. For the whole antrum the ratio of gastrin cell to somatostatin cell populations decreases through the rat life from 6.5 at 7 days to 1.5 in old age with a stable value, 2.5, during adult period. Examination of the topographical distribution throughout the antrum of these two populations shows that, strip per strip, their numerical ratio varies. Homogeneous values for the latter occur in the middle part of antrum and, as rule, in each group they reflect the mean value calculated for the whole of the antrum.
The distribution of polypeptide-YY cells within the gastric and duodenal mucosa of the rat and the development of their populations were examined daily from 3 days before birth until day 8 postpartum and after weaning, on day 25 postpartum, using a precise technique of quantification. Polypeptide-YY cells appeared in the stomach around the 19th day of gestation. They were always more numerous in the antral mucosa and particularly in the pyloric sphincter area than in the fundic mucosa. Immunogold staining at the electron-microscopic level revealed that, in the antrum, polypeptide-YY was colocalised with gastrin in endocrine cells mainly of type G and, more rarely, in cells of intestinal type IG. Comparison of the gastrin and polypeptide-YY cell populations in the same rats indicated that, except at day 6 postpartum, there were fewer gastric polypeptide-YY cells than immunoreactive gastrin cells and that polypeptide-YY cells were 8 times less numerous than gastrin cells at day 25 postpartum. Polypeptide-YY cells were clearly present in the duodenum of the 19-day-old embryo. This population increases with age until day 8 postpartum, then significantly decreases (by 87%) between days 8 and 25 postpartum. Because polypeptide-YY may inhibit secretion of gastric acid, it is possible that the presence of significant population of polypeptide-YY cells in the upper digestive tract during the first postnatal week of life may play a role (endocrine or paracrine) in the decreased acid secretion occurring in the newborn rat.
Epithelial cell proliferation in the fundic and antral mucosae was studied in 19 duodenal ulcer patients, 11 patients having undergone fundic superselective vagotomy for duodenal ulcer, and 10 controls. This was achieved through in vitro incorporation of tritiated thymidine in mucosal biopsies and radioautography. Except for increased fundic mucosal height, duodenal ulcer patients did not differ from controls for all parameters studied. In vagotomized patients, as compared to the other two groups, the labeling index was significantly enhanced in the innervated antral mucosa where atrophic gastritis developed, but there was no change in the labeling index and no worsening of mucosal inflammation in the denervated fundic mucosa. The only abnormality in the latter was a striking expansion, towards the surface, of the proliferative area within the fundic pit. The labeling indices and the degree of gastritis in gastric mucosae are significantly correlated in control and duodenal ulcer patients. After superselective vagotomy, this correlation still existed in antral mucosa (r = 0.88, P less than 0.001) but not in fundic mucosa. If findings in antral mucosa, after superselective vagotomy, seemed related to gastritis lesions, those in fundic mucosa were not and may indicate an alteration due to the vagotomy per se.
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