Goetze Jens Peter, Hansen Carsten Palnaes, Rehfeld Jens F
Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.
Regul Pept. 2006 Jan 15;133(1-3):47-53. doi: 10.1016/j.regpep.2005.09.016. Epub 2005 Oct 5.
In addition to the acid-stimulatory gastrins, progastrin also release N-terminal fragments. In order to examine the cellular content, secretion and peripheral metabolism of these fragments, we developed an immunoassay specific for the N-terminal sequence of human progastrin.
The concentration of N-terminal progastrin fragments in human antral tissue was 6.7 nmol/g tissue (n=5), which was only half of that of acid-stimulatory gastrins (12 nmol/g tissue). Gel chromatography of antral extracts showed that the progastrin fragment 1-35 and 1-19 constitute the major part of the N-terminal progastrin fragments. The basal concentration of N-terminal fragments in normal human plasma was almost 30-fold higher than that of the amidated, acid-stimulatory gastrins (286 pmol/l versus 9.8 pmol/l, n=26, P<0.001). In contrast, the concentration of N-terminal fragments in hypergastrinemic plasma was only 2.7-fold higher than the concentration of amidated gastrins (540 pmol vs. 198 pmol/l, P=0.02). During meal stimulation, the plasma concentrations of N-terminal progastrin fragments and amidated gastrins increased in a correlated manner (r=0.97, P=0.005). The half life for progastrin 1-35 in circulation was 30 min, and a pig model revealed the kidneys and the vasculature to the head as the primary sites of degradation.
The cellular and circulatory concentration profiles of N-terminal progastrin fragments differ markedly from those of the acid-stimulatory gastrins. The high basal plasma concentrations of N-terminal progastrin fragments cannot be explained by differences in elimination.