Short fasting dramatically decreases rat duodenal secretory responsiveness to orexin A but not to VIP or melatonin
Gunnar Flemström,
Markus Sjöblom,
Gunilla Jedstedt, and
Karl E. O. Åkerman
Division of Physiology, Department of Neuroscience, Uppsala University, SE-751 23 Uppsala, Sweden
Submitted 28 April 2003
; accepted in final form 15 July 2003
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ABSTRACT
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Orexins are involved in the central nervous control of appetite and behavior, and in addition, they are present in endocrine cells and/or neurons in the intestine. The role of these peptides in peripheral regulation of intestinal secretion has not been investigated. We thus compared the effects of orexin A and some established secretagogues on duodenal HCO3- secretion in fed rats with effects in rats exposed to short (overnight) food deprivation. Rats were anesthetized with thiobarbiturate, a 12-mm segment of proximal duodenum with intact blood supply was cannulated in situ, and the alkaline secretion was titrated by pH stat. Secretagogues were supplied specifically to the duodenum by close intra-arterial infusion. Orexin A (60-600 pmol·kg-1·h-1) caused marked and dose-dependent stimulation of the duodenal secretion in fed animals but did not affect secretion in overnight food-deprived animals. Similarly, short fasting caused a 100-fold increase in the amount of the muscarinic agonist bethanechol (from 50 to 5,000 nmol·kg-1·h-1) required for stimulation of the secretion. In contrast, the secretory responses to VIP (50-1,000 pmol·kg-1·h-1) and melatonin (20-200 nmol·kg-1·h-1) were not affected. The appetite-regulating peptide orexin A is thus a stimulant of intestinal secretion, but the response to this peptide as well as the muscarinic agonist bethanechol is markedly dependent on previous intake of food. Overnight fasting is a standard experimental procedure in studies of gastrointestinal function and pathophysiology in humans and animals. Studies made on neuroendocrine control of intestinal secretion may require reevaluation with respect to feeding status.
bethanochol; bicarbonate secretion; duodenal mucosal protection; food deprivation; vasoactive intestinal polypeptide
OREXINS WERE FIRST ISOLATED as hypothalamic appetite-increasing peptides (9, 38) and appear to be involved in short-term regulation of feeding rather than long-term regulation of body weight (6, 46). Effects are mediated via two G protein-coupled receptors denoted OX1 and OX2 (21, 24). Orexins and receptors were also recently discovered in numerous endocrine (enterochromaffin) cells in the gastrointestinal tract and are present in the enteric nerves (21, 24, 27). The role of these compounds in peripheral regulation of intestinal function has, however, not been investigated in detail. Orexin cells in the hypothalamus are stimulated by fasting and inhibited by feeding (6). By tradition (32), experimental studies of gastrointestinal physiology and pathophysiology in humans and in intact animals have been conducted after overnight fast. Because the presence of food itself has a considerable effect of intestinal function (14), we have compared the actions of orexins and other intestinal secretagogues in fed animals and in animals deprived of food for a short period. The duodenal mucosal HCO3- secretion, chosen for study, is an interesting model of intestinal anion transport. This secretion is controlled through central and peripheral neuroendocrine mechanisms. It is a main mechanism of duodenal mucosal defense against acid discharged from the stomach (11) and is deficient in patients with chronic and acute duodenal ulcer disease (16, 19, 29).
Melatonin influences a variety of biological processes, including behavior, and enterochromaffin cells in the gastrointestinal tract have been identified to be a major source of melatonin production (5). The total amount of melatonin present in the intestine is thus
400x larger than in the central nervous system (5, 17, 34). Recent studies from our group have shown that melatonin, acting at MT2 receptors, stimulates mucosal HCO3- secretion in rat duodenum in vivo (41, 42) and, in addition, mediates centrally elicited neural stimulation of the alkaline secretion (42). Melatonin also induces intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) signaling in isolated human and rat duodenal enterocytes, strongly suggesting an action at enterocyte membrane receptors (43).
Cholinergic transmission is of main importance in central as well as peripheral nervous control of gastrointestinal function. Stimuli mediated by the vagal nerves or parenteral administration of cholinergic agonists, including the predominantly muscarinergic agonist bethanechol, increase the duodenal HCO3- secretion in all species tested, including humans (1, 10, 15, 37). Use of subtype-selective ligands demonstrated that carbachol-induced [Ca2+]i signaling in enterocytes isolated from human and rat duodenum is mediated by muscarinic M3 receptors (8). VIP is a potent stimulant of intestinal secretion, and infusion of VIP increases the HCO3- transport by the duodenal mucosa in all species tested (10, 13, 47). The peptide does not affect [Ca2+]i signaling in human enterocytes in primary culture (8) but causes a marked increase cAMP production in rat and guinea pig isolated duodenal crypt and villus enterocytes (35, 36).
We demonstrate in the present study that overnight fasting abolishes the duodenal secretory response to the appetite-regulating peptide orexin A and profoundly downregulates that to the muscarinergic agonist bethanechol. In contrast, responses to VIP and melatonin are little affected.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Chemicals and drugs. Orexin A (human, rat, mouse) was purchased from Peninsula (Merseyside, UK), and bethanechol (carbamyl-
-methylcholine chloride), VIP (human, rat, porcine), and BSA were from Sigma (St. Louis, MO). Melatonin and the anesthetic 5-ethyl-5-(1'-methyl-propyl)-2-thiobarbiturate (Inactin) were from Research Biochemicals International (Natick, MA). Bethanechol, melatonin, and the anesthetic were stored in powder form and dissolved in isotonic saline at pH 7.4 on the day of use. Orexin A and VIP were stored at -20°C in stock solutions also containing 0.5 mg/ml BSA.
Animal preparation and measurements. All experiments were approved by the Uppsala Ethics Committee for Experiments with Animals. Male F1-hybrids of Lewis x Dark Agouti rats (Animal Department, Biomedical Center, Uppsala, Sweden), weighing 220-260 g were placed in a conditioning unit under standardized temperature and light conditions (21-22°C, 12:12-h light-dark cycle). The rats were kept in cages in groups of two or more and had, unless deprived of food, free access to pelleted food (Ewos, Södertälje, Sweden).
The animals were deprived of food (fasted) for 16 h (overnight) before experiments but had free access to drinking water. Fed rats from the same batch had continuous access to their regular supply of pelleted food and water. Experiments were started by anesthetizing the animal at close to 9 AM with Inactin (120 mg/kg body wt ip). Anesthesia was performed within the Animal Department by the person who had previously handled the animals. Subsequently, the rats were tracheotomized with a tracheal tube to facilitate respiration, and body temperature was maintained at 37-38°C throughout experiments by a heating pad controlled by a rectal thermistor probe. The surgical and experimental procedures have been described previously (12, 42). A brief summary is given, and some modifications are described here. A femoral artery and vein were catheterized with PE-50 polyethylene catheters (Becton-Dickinson, Parsippany, NJ). For continuous recordings of systemic arterial blood pressure, the arterial catheter containing 20 IU/ml heparin isotonic saline was connected to a transducer operating a PowerLab system (AD Instruments, Hastings, UK). The vein was used for infusion of Ringer solution [(in mM) 145 Na+, 124 Cl-, 2.5 K+, 0.75 Ca2+, and 25 HCO3-] at a rate of 1.0 ml/h. The latter was made to compensate for fluid loss and to avoid acid-base changes during the experiments. Blood acid-base balance was controlled (AVL Compact 3, Graz, Austria) in 40-µl arterial blood samples taken at the start and end of experiments. Values of blood pH were between 7.30 and 7.45, and changes in base excess were within ± 3 mM.
The abdomen was opened by a midline incision, and the gastric pylorus was ligated with a suture. To avoid bile and pancreatic secretion entering the intestine, the common bile duct was always catheterized close to its entrance to the duodenum with a PE-10 polyethylene tubing (Becton-Dickinson). For measurement of duodenal mucosal HCO3- secretion, a 12-mm segment of duodenum with its blood supply intact, starting 10-12 mm distal to the pylorus and thus devoid of Brunner's glands, was cannulated in situ between two glass tubes connected to a reservoir. Fluid (10 ml of 154 mM NaCl), maintained at 37°C by a water jacket, was rapidly circulated by a gas lift of 100% oxygen. HCO3- secretion into the luminal perfusate was continuously titrated with 50 mM HCl at pH 7.4 under automatic control of a pH stat system (Radiometer, Copenhagen, Denmark). After completion of the operative setup, the abdomen was closed with sutures and the animal was left undisturbed for 1 h for stabilization of cardiovascular, respiratory, and gastrointestinal functions.
Intra-arterial infusion to the duodenum. All secretagogues were administered to the duodenum by close intra-arterial infusion, described previously by Sjöblom et al. (42). Only small amounts of the compounds were thus required, minimizing any central nervous action. The hepatic artery was cannulated, tied 3-4 mm proximal to its entrance into the liver, and perfused in the retrograde direction at 17 µl/min (Fig. 1). This perfusion results in distribution of the perfusate mainly to the duodenum (via the cranial pancreatico-duodenal artery) and pancreas. The distribution was checked visually at the start of experiments by intra-arterial injection of a small amount (
0.1 ml) of a marker dye (Evans blue, 2% solution in saline).

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Fig. 1. Schematic presentation of close intra-arterial infusion to the duodenum. The hepatic artery was cannulated, tied before its entrance into the liver, and perfused in retrograde direction.
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Data analyses. Descriptive statistics are expressed as means ± SE. Rates of alkaline secretion by the duodenum are expressed as microequivalents of base (HCO3-) per centimeter of intestine per hour. The secretion and the mean arterial blood pressure were recorded continuously and registered at 10-min intervals. The statistical significance of data was tested by repeated-measures ANOVA. To test the difference within a group, a one-factor repeated-measure ANOVA was used followed by Fishers's protected least significant difference (PLSD) post hoc test. Between groups (food deprived and fed animals), HCO3- secretion in response to drug administration was compared. For this comparison, a two-factor repeated-measures ANOVA followed by a one-way ANOVA at each time point was used. If the ANOVA was significant at a given time point, a Fishers's PLSD post hoc analyses was used. All statistical analyses were performed on an IBM-compatible computer using StatView 5.0 software (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). P values of <0.05 were considered significant.
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RESULTS
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Food deprivation abolishes stimulation by orexin A. The stomach in overnight food-deprived animals had a smaller volume than that in animals with continuous access to food, but there were no visual differences in the appearance of the proximal part of the small intestine. In all groups, there were only small amounts of contents within the duodenal lumen. The examined segment spontaneously secreted HCO3- at steady basal rates in all groups tested and infusion of vehicle alone affected neither the alkaline secretion nor the mean arterial blood pressure.
Close intra-arterial infusion of orexin A (60, 240, and 600 pmol·kg-1·h-1) to the duodenum did not affect (P > 0.05) the alkaline secretion in overnight fasted animals (Fig. 2). In contrast, there was a significant (P < 0.05) and dose-dependent increase in secretion (from 10.6 ± 2.48 to 19.9 ± 3.64 µeq·cm-1·h-1) in animals not deprived of their regular food. Infusion of orexin A did not affect the mean arterial blood pressure in either group (not shown).

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Fig. 2. Orexin A stimulates the HCO3- secretion by the duodenal mucosa in continuously fed but not in overnight-fasted animals. Compounds were administered by close intra-arterial infusion, and the secretion was continuously titrated (pH stat). Means ± SE of HCO3- secretion are shown (n = 6 in fed and n = 7 in fasted animals). No changes in mean arterial blood pressure were observed in these experiments (not shown).
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Decreased sensitivity to bethanechol. The cholinomimetic agonist bethanechol acts predominantly at muscarinergic receptors. Close intra-arterial infusion of bethanechol (50, 500, and 5,000 nmol·kg-1·h-1) to the duodenum in fed animals caused dose-dependent increases in mucosal HCO3- secretion (from 13.7 ± 1.71 to 28.3 ± 5.97 µeq·cm-1·h-1). Already the lowest dose infused (50 nmol·kg-1·h-1) significantly (P < 0.05) increased the alkaline secretion (Fig. 3).

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Fig. 3. Food deprivation markedly decreases the sensibility of the HCO3--secreting duodenal epithelium to the muscarinergic agonist bethanechol. Means ± SE of HCO3- secretion are shown (n = 6 in both groups). No changes in mean arterial blood pressure were observed in these experiments (not shown).
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In overnight food-deprived animals, the highest dose tested (5,000 nmol·kg-1·h-1) was required for stimulation (P < 0.05) of the secretion (from 13.1 ± 1.42 to 21.4 ± 4.11 µeq·cm-1·h-1). Overnight fasting thus induced an
100-fold decrease in sensitivity to bethanechol. The present (close intra-arterial infusions) of bethanechol did not significantly affect the mean arterial blood pressure (not shown).
Infusion of VIP and melatonin. VIP is a potent stimulant of intestinal electrolyte and fluid transport, including the HCO3- secretion by the duodenal mucosa (10). Close intra-arterial infusion of VIP (50, 250, and 1,000 pmol·kg-1·h-1) increased (P < 0.05) the alkaline secretion in fed animals from 12.5 ± 2.05 to 28.8 ± 4.05 µeq·cm-1·h-1 and that in overnight fasted animals from 9.68 ± 1.71 to 28.3 ± 3.12 µeq·cm-1·h-1 (Fig. 4). There were no significant (P > 0.05) differences between the rises in secretion elicited in fed and fasted animals. The low doses of VIP used in the present study and infused close intra-arterially to the duodenum did not significantly (P > 0.05) affect the mean arterial blood pressure in either group (not shown).

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Fig. 4. VIP is a potent stimulant of duodenal mucosal HCO3- secretion in vivo. Means ± SE of HCO3- secretion are shown, and there were no significant differences between fed and fasted animals (n = 6 in the fed and n = 8 in the fasted group). The close intra-arterial infusion of VIP did not affect the mean arterial blood pressure (not shown).
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Close intra-arterial infusion of melatonin (20, 200, and 2,000 nmol·kg-1·h-1) significantly (P < 0.05) increased mucosal HCO3- secretion in fed as well as in fasted animals (Fig. 5). With the highest dose tested, secretion increased from 10.5 ± 1.74 to 19.9 ± 2.90 µeq·cm-1·h-1 in the fed group and from 10.4 ± 1.78 to 17.3 ± 2.16 µeq·cm-1·h-1 in the fasted group. The magnitudes of the rise in secretion in fed and fasted animals were not significantly (P > 0.05) different. Infusion of melatonin did not affect the mean arterial blood pressure in either group (not shown).

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Fig. 5. The neurohormone melatonin is a stimulant of duodenal mucosal HCO3- secretion. No significant changes between the fed (n = 6) and fasted (n = 7) were found, and melatonin did not affect the mean arterial blood pressure.
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DISCUSSION
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We demonstrate here that feeding induces, or very markedly potentiates, the response of the duodenal HCO3- secreting epithelium to some stimuli but not to others. The HCO3- secretion is under central as well as peripheral neurohumoral influence, and intracerebro-ventricular administration of some neuropeptides and the
1-selective adrenoceptor agonist phenylephrine stimulates the duodenal secretion in the rat (10, 12, 25, 42). The centrally elicited secretory responses are mediated by vagal and sympathetic neural pathways and by release of
-endorphin from the pituitary gland. In the present study, all secretagogues were administered to the duodenum by close intra-arterial infusion (Fig. 1). Only very small amounts were thus required for stimulation of secretion, strongly suggesting that rises in secretion reflected stimulation of the duodenal mucosa per se and that central nervous actions did not occur. The absence of a depression of the mean arterial blood pressure after infusion of VIP or bethanechol provided further evidence that effects of intra-arterially administered compounds were confined to the duodenum in the present study.
Orexin A caused robust stimulation of the HCO3- secretion in fed animals but did not affect secretion in overnight fasted animals. Orexins (A and B) were originally discovered in the central nervous system as peptides that increase the appetite of fed animals (38). Subsequently, both orexins were found also in neurons and in neuroendocrine cells of the intestine (21, 22), and orexin immunoreactivity is colocalized with VIP and choline acetyltransferase (30). OX1 as well as OX2 receptors are expressed in the intestine, although in different cell types (30). OX1 receptors are expressed mainly in neurons, whereas endocrine cells express OX2 receptors. The roles played by orexins in the gastrointestinal tract are not well understood. The peptides have been reported both to increase (21) and to reduce (39) motility in the small intestine. In the colon, orexins induce stimulation of motility (6, 22). Orexins thus probably act at several levels, and some of their different actions are very likely mediated via other neurohumoral systems in the intestine. Nitric oxide-linked mechanisms are proposed to mediate orexin-induced inhibition of motility (39). On the other hand, contraction of isolated ileum seems to occur through release of acetylcholine (28). Fasting abolished the HCO3- secretory response to orexin A and markedly reduced the sensitivity to bethanechol (Figs. 2 and 3). If secretion stimulated by orexins (in fed animals) is controlled via cholinergic mechanisms similar to those for contraction, reduction in cholinergic responsiveness by fasting could induce a secondary attenuation of responses to orexins. Muscarinic stimulation (carbachol) has been shown to directly activate intracellular Ca2+ mobilization in cultured (8) and actutely isolated (43) duodenal enterocytes.
The mechanisms by which feeding promotes responses to orexin and bethanecol are far from clear. Stimulation of secretion might require or be potentiated by food-induced intestinal motility (14). An attractive alternative explanation for the changes in sensitivity to orexin A and the muscarinic agonist would be that food constituents either directly or indirectly by central or peripheral mechanisms stimulate the activity or expression of signal pathways or receptors in the intestinal mucosa. Unfortunately, the information on the role of feeding on intestinal function is limited. Fasting and glucopenia stimulate orexin production in the lateral hypothalamus (reviewed in Ref. 7). Fasting also increases orexin receptor expression in this region (26). Lowered glucose levels stimulate orexin release in the endocrine pancreas (31), and hypoglycemia increases plasma orexin levels (23). Thus there seems to be a close link between the glucose-sensing system and orexin release (reviewed in Ref. 7). Our study indicates that there exists additional links between the feeding status and the orexin system. The feeding status thus not only regulates the synthesis and release of orexins but can also control the responsiveness to the peptides on intestinal cells. Alternatively, fasting may inhibit orexin and or muscarinic responses by receptor desensitization.
In contrast to the findings with orexin A and bethanechol, the HCO3- secretory responses to VIP and melatonin were not affected by overnight fasting. This demonstrates that the feeding does not cause a general increase in responsiveness of secretory peptides but has a more selective action. One explanation for the difference seen here could be different signal pathways used for stimulation of HCO3- transport. Orexins and muscarinic M3 agonists couple to intracellular Ca2+ mobilization and phospholipase C activation (8, 24). VIP is known to stimulate the secretion via cAMP-dependent mechanisms (35, 36), whereas the signal pathway used by melatonin may be different. Melatonin receptors are usually coupled to inhibitory Gi/o proteins (3, 45). However, melatonin induces cytosolic Ca2+ mobilization in primary cultures of ovine pars tuberalis and HEK 293 cells stably expressing MT1 receptors (4), and a recent study demonstrated that melatonin, acting at MT2 receptors, mobilizes intracellular Ca2+ in isolated human and rat duodenal enterocytes (43).
Knowledge about the HCO3- transport processes in duodenal mucosa originates from numerous studies involving amphibian mucosa in vitro, isolated mammalian duodenal enterocytes and cell membranes (10), and, more recently, from studies of genetically modified mice. Anion transport processes in duodenal epithelium are, in general, similar to those of more distal small intestine (2). An amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchanger extrudes acid (18, 33). Duodenal enterocytes import HCO3- at the basolateral membrane by Na+(n)HCO3- cotransport and export HCO3- by Cl-/HCO3- exchange as well as via an apical anion conductive pathway (18, 20, 44). The CFTR is the membrane-spanning conductance transporting HCO3- as well as Cl- into the duodenal lumen (40). Interactions between the CFTR channel and the major apical anion exchanger downregulated in adenoma (20), as well as the Cl- to HCO3- ratio of the CFTR channel, may relate to the high rates of alkali secretion by the duodenal epithelium.
Bicarbonate and mucus form a "mucus-bicarbonate barrier" on top of the duodenal mucosa and are considered a major line of defense against acid-induced mucosal injury (11). The present study demonstrates that orexin A is a stimulant of the duodenal secretion and that short fasting abolishes the responsiveness to orexin and markedly reduces that to bethanechol. Overnight food deprivation is, by tradition (32), a standard experimental procedure in studies of gastrointestinal function and pathophysiology in humans and animals. The present observations strongly suggest that the many studies made on neuroendocrine control of intestinal secretion and effects of drug therapy may require reevaluation with respect to feeding status.
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DISCLOSURES
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Support was given by the Swedish Research Council (Grants 3515 and 12205), the Wallenberg Foundation, and the Swedish Society for Medical Research.
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FOOTNOTES
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Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: G. Flemström, Dept. of Neuroscience, Div. of Physiology, Uppsala Univ., BMC, P.O. Box 572, SE-751 23 Uppsala, Sweden (E-mail: Gunnar.Flemstrom{at}Fysiologi.uu.se).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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