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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 233: G225-G228, 1977;
0193-1857/77 $5.00
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AJP: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, Vol 233, Issue 3, G225-G228
Copyright © 1977 by American Physiological Society

ARTICLES

Evidence for a histamine H2 receptor that inhibits pepsin secretion in the dog

BI Hirschowitz and GA Hutchison

H+ and pepsin output were studied in four gastric fistula dogs with histamine and in five dogs with 4-methylhistamine (4(Me)H), an H2 histamine receptor agonist with little H1 effect. Each amine was given in 45-min incremental step doses to constitute full dose-response curves. Pepsin output was biphasic with both drugs. Peak pepsin output occurred at low doses (less than or equal to 5 microgram/kg-h) and progressive inhibition of output was seen at higher doses, but H+ output was stimulated at all doses. The H2 receptor antagonist, cimetidine, competitively inhibited H+ stimulation. The pepsin response to histamine or 4(Me)H was converted to a positive logsigmoid response when cimetidine was given at the same time. In the presence of cimetidine (1 mg/kg-h), the outputs of H+ and pepsin were positively correlated in the full histamine dose range. These data show that histamine effects on pepsin secretin are a mixture of stimulation and inhibition and that the receptor responsible for pepsin stimulation is of a high affinity, low Km, H2 type, whereas inhibition at high doses of histamine is probably mediated by a low affinity, high Km receptor, also H2 type.





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