Influences of secretory activities in rat submandibular glands on tissue kallikrein circulating in the blood
- PMID: 7640007
- DOI: 10.1113/expphysiol.1995.sp003857
Influences of secretory activities in rat submandibular glands on tissue kallikrein circulating in the blood
Abstract
Changes in serum levels of rat tissue kallikrein (rK1) in venous blood were measured, using a newly developed radioimmunoassay, before and after autonomic nerve stimulations of submandibular salivary secretion. rK1 secreted into saliva under these conditions was measured by radioimmunoassay and by enzymic activity assay, using the fluorogenic peptide substrate D-Val-Leu-Arg-7-amino-4-trifluoromethylcoumarin (AFC). Following an overnight fast, serum rK1 concentration was 30-40 ng ml-1. Unilateral electrical stimulation of the submandibular sympathetic nerve supply (at 50 Hz in bursts of 1 s every 10 s for 60 min) evoked a small flow of saliva with a very high rK1 concentration, resulting in a large output of rK1 of 2104.4 +/- 603.5 micrograms (n = 6). Such stimulation caused a large degranulation of granular duct cells and a corresponding reduction in glandular rK1 content. Unilateral electrical stimulation of the parasympathetic nerve supply (at 5 Hz continuously for 60 min) evoked a copious flow of saliva with a very low rK1 concentration, resulting in a low output of rK1 (18.1 +/- 4.9 micrograms; n = 6). Despite these large differences in salivary outputs of rK1, serum concentrations of rK1 were increased similarly following either sympathetic or parasympathetic stimulation by 48 and 46%, respectively. If the submandibular duct was briefly obstructed during sympathetic stimulation, inducing leakage and glandular oedema, then serum rK1 increased greatly (40-fold); a similar increase to that seen by others in previous studies without deliberate obstruction. Four days after bilateral submandibular-sublingual sialadenectomy serum rK1 concentration was reduced by approximately 50%. The results indicate that submandibular glands normally contribute to circulating levels of rK1 in rats, but this contribution is independent of the amounts of rK1 secreted into saliva by sympathetically induced exocytosis, and is likely to arise from basal vesicular transport. However, if glandular leakage occurs during sympathetic stimulation of submandibular secretion this then causes increases in the circulating levels of rK1 that correlate with the large amounts being secreted into saliva.
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