0000000000116949

AUTHOR

Dolores Barrachina

0000-0002-4332-2929

Effects of endotoxin on neurally-mediated gastric acid secretion in the rat.

Abstract The effects of a peripheral administration of E. coli endotoxin on neurally-mediated gastric acid secretion and the role of endogenous opioids or PAF receptors in endotoxin effects have been evaluated in the continuously perfused stomach of the anaesthetized rat. Gastric acid secretion stimulated by distension (20 cm H2O) was reduced dose-dependently by single intravenous bolus injection of endotoxin (0.1–10 μg kg−1). Doses of 5 μg kg−1 induced a peak reduction of distension-stimulated acid output and significantly reduced the secretory response induced by an intravenous bolus of 2-deoxy-d-glucose (150 mg kg−1). This dose of endotoxin did not significantly modify mean systemic arte…

research product

P008 Differences in macrophage infiltration and Wnt ligands expression between stricturing and penetrating behaviour in Crohn’s disease

research product

P087 Increased wnt ligands expression in M2c macrophages is associated with fibrosis in Stat6 knockout mice

research product

P043 Succinate receptor (SUCNR1) mediates leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions induced by TNFa

Abstract Background The Krebs cycle metabolite succinate contributes to inflammatory conditions like arthritis and colitis by activating its receptor SUCNR1. We aimed to analyze whether the succinate-SUCNR1 pathway contributes to the leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions that initiate the inflammatory response. Methods We evaluated leukocyte rolling and adhesion by intravital microscopy in cremaster venules of wild-type (WT) and Sucrn1−/− mice treated, 4h before, with succinate (1 Mm, intraescrotally), combined or not with the common pro-inflammatory cytokine TNFα (500 ng/mice, i.p.), or with their vehicles. We analyzed the activity of the NF-κB signaling pathway in endothelial cells (HUV…

research product

Nitric oxide: Relation to integrity, injury, and healing of the gastric mucosa

Nitric oxide (NO) plays a multifaceted role in mucosal integrity. The numerous functions of NO and the double-edged role played by NO in most of them provide a great complexity to the NO action. The three enzymatic sources of NO, neuronal NO-synthase (nNOS), endothelial NOS (eNOS), and inducible NOS (iNOS), have been characterised in the gastrointestinal tract. The protective properties of the NO derived from constitutive NO-synthases (eNOS and nNOS) have already been well established. Less clear is the role assigned to iNOS. The simplistic initial view of low levels of NO synthesised by constitutive NOS being protective while exaggerated NO levels after iNOS induction leading irremediably …

research product

P056 Crohn’s Disease associated fibrosis modulates the expression of collagen receptors

Abstract Background Crohn’s Disease (CD) patients often develop stenotic complications as immunomodulatory treatments do not prevent the fibrogenic response in the affected tissues, where a dysregulated activation of stromal cells provokes an excessive deposition of extracellular matrix (ECM). Recent evidences support the notion that local cells can sense the consequent alterations in tissue structure and rigidity through receptors that respond to some ECM components, and this may perpetuate the fibrogenic process even in the absence of inflammation. We aim to analyse the relevance of these signalling pathways in the fibrotic process associated to CD. Methods We obtained fibrotic ileal tiss…

research product