Rinderknecht H, Maset R, Collias K, Carmack C
Dig Dis Sci. 1983 Jun;28(6):518-25. doi: 10.1007/BF01308154.
Profiles of pancreatic secretory proteins (zymogens, lysosomal enzymes) were studied in Syrian golden hamsters after sequential stimulation of the pancreas with secretin and cholecystokinin-octapeptide (CCK). The flow rate of pancreatic juice after secretin (0.2 CU/100 g) was approximately 2.7 microliters/min/100 g animal (about 55% of that in human subjects). The half-life of the secretin effect was about 60 min. The initial concentration of protein in pancreatic juice (minute-to-minute collection) in response to secretin was over 10 times larger than that in human subjects and the "wash-out" phase required greater than 1 hr vs less than 10 min in humans. CCK (4 ng/100 g) in minute-to-minute collections of juice produced an approximately eightfold increase in concentration of secretory products over baseline values, and the half-life of its effect was about 2 min, similar to that found in human subjects. Digestive as well as lysosomal enzyme activities in hamster pancreatic juice were 10-15 times higher than those found in human pancreatic secretions. This species difference may be relevant to the susceptibility of the hamster pancreas to carcinogens.