434
SECTION V
Gastrointestinal Physiology
is terminated after the meal moves from the stomach into the
small intestine.
Gastric parietal cells are highly specialized for their unusual
task of secreting concentrated acid (Figure 26–8). The cells are
packed with mitochondria that supply energy to drive the api-
cal H,K-ATPase, or proton pump, that moves H
- ions out of the
parietal cell against a concentration gradient of more than a
million-fold. At rest, the proton pumps are sequestered within
the parietal cell in a series of membrane compartments known
as tubulovesicles. When the parietal cell begins to secrete, on
the other hand, these vesicles fuse with invaginations of the api-
cal membrane known as canaliculi, thereby substantially ampli-
fying the apical membrane area and positioning the proton
pumps to begin acid secretion (Figure 26–9). The apical mem-
brane also contains potassium channels, which supply the K
+
ions to be exchanged for H
+
, and Cl
- channels that supply the
counterion for HCl secretion (Figure 26–10). The secretion of
protons is also accompanied by the release of equivalent num-
bers of bicarbonate ions into the bloodstream, which as we will
see, are later used to neutralize gastric acidity once its function
is complete (Figure 26–10).
The three agonists of the parietal cell—gastrin, histamine,
and acetylcholine—each bind to distinct receptors on the
basolateral membrane (Figure 26–9). Gastrin and acetylcho-
line promote secretion by elevating cytosolic free calcium con-
centrations, whereas histamine increases intracellular cyclic
adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP). The net effect of
these second messengers are the transport and morphological
changes described above. However, it is important to be aware
that the two distinct pathways for activation are synergistic,
with a greater than additive effect on secretion rates when his-
tamine plus gastrin or acetylcholine, or all three, are present
simultaneously. The physiologic significance of this synergism
is that high rates of secretion can be stimulated with relatively
small changes in availability of each of the stimuli. Synergism
is also therapeutically significant because secretion can be
markedly inhibited by blocking the action of only one of the
triggers (most commonly that of histamine, via H
2
histamine
antagonists that are widely used therapies for adverse effects of
excessive gastric secretion, such as reflux).
FIGURE 26–6
Cyanocobalamin (vitamin B
12
).
N
N
O
H
H HH
HO CH 2
CH 3
O HO CH 3
P
O
O O
CHCH 2 NH
CH 3 CO
CH 2
CH 2
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3
−
+
C
C
Co
CN
CH 2 CH 2 CONH 2
NH 2 COCH 2
CH 2 CH 2 CONH 2
N N
CH
N
B
C
A
D
N
CH 2 CONH 2
CH 2 CH 2 CONH 2
NH 2 COCH 2
H 3 C
H 3 C
FIGURE 26–7
Regulation of gastric acid and pepsin secretion by soluble mediators and neural input.
Gastrin is released from G cells in the
antrum and travels through the circulation to influence the activity of ECL cells and parietal cells. The specific agonists of the chief cell are not well under-
stood. Gastrin release is negatively regulated by luminal acidity via the release of somatostatin from antral D cells.
(Adapted from Barrett KE:
Gastrointestinal
Physiology
. McGraw-Hill, 2006.)
−
G cell
GRP
ANTRUM
Peptides/amino acids
D cell
SST
Gastrin
H+
Nerve ending
Circulation ECL cell
Histamine
ACh??
ACh
P
Chief cell
Parietal cell
ACh
H+
FUNDUS