Noncholecystokinin peptides in human serum which cause gallbladder contraction
- PMID: 7162364
- DOI: 10.1016/0024-3205(82)90070-4
Noncholecystokinin peptides in human serum which cause gallbladder contraction
Abstract
In fasting human serum, cholecystokinin (CCK) is not the principal substance which causes in vitro rabbit gallbladder contraction. Removal of CCK by affinity chromatography from fasting sera from 8 healthy adults reduced bioactivity only by 18 +/- 4% (SEM). Unlike CCK, the bioactivity of serum was enhanced by 30 to 57% rather than destroyed by pronase and chymotrypsin respectively and was not inhibited by dibutyryl cGMP. Reduction of serum bioactivity by carboxypeptidase Y indicated that the bioactive substances in serum are peptides. On Sephadex G-50, bioactive substances eluted in positions different from any known form of CCK. Thus, the principal substances in fasting human serum causing in vitro gallbladder contraction are not CCK but are most likely small peptides which act at receptors different from the receptors for CCK.
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