Effect of ingested carbohydrate, fat, and protein on the release of somatostatin-28 in humans.

1990 
Abstract The level of somatostatin-28, a bioactive peptide derived from pro-somatostatin in gastrointestinal epithelial cells, increases in human plasma after food intake. To determine if an equivalent response occurs with individual components of a mixed meal, somatostatin-28 and prosomatostatin, somatostatin-14, and somatostatin-13, in combination, were measured in healthy men before and after intake of (a) a mixed meal (715 kcal), (b) carbohydrate (100 g equivalent glucose), (c) protein (22 and 45 g), and (d) fat (25 and 50 g). After the mixed meal, somatostatin-28 levels doubled within 120 min and gradually declined by 4 h. With carbohydrate, somatostatin-28 levels were unaltered. After 22 and 45 g of protein, somatostatin-28 increased equivalently within 60 min, representing 30% of the amount with the mixed meal. With 25 g fat, a somatostatin-28 increase similar to that with the meal was seen; this response was doubled with 50 g fat. No changes in prosomatostatin, somatostatin-14, or somatostatin-13 were observed with the mixed meal or with the separate macronutrients. The authors conclude that fat is the major stimulus for somatostatin-28 secretion in humans and hypothesize that somatostatin-28 is an inhibitor of the endocrine and exocrine pancreas during nutrient absorption.
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