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      Pepsinogen C gene product is a possible growth factor during gastric mucosal healing.

      Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
      Acetic Acid, Animals, DNA, Complementary, isolation & purification, Gastric Mucosa, enzymology, microbiology, pathology, Gastritis, chemically induced, genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Growth Substances, physiology, therapeutic use, Helicobacter, Male, Pepsinogens, RNA, Messenger, biosynthesis, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Stomach Ulcer

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          Abstract

          We isolated, by the subtraction cloning method, a pepsinogen C (PGC) gene fragment (the sequence between the 968th and 1179th base pairs) from a rat gastric mucosal cDNA library as a cDNA clone encoding a substance that promotes growth of the normal rat gastric mucosal cell line RGM1. Northern blot analysis revealed that PGC gene expression was enhanced not only in acetic acid-induced chronic gastric ulcers but also in indomethacin-induced gastric mucosal lesions. PGC gene expression was also increased in the Helicobacter felis-infected stomachs. Thus, the PGC gene may play a role in gastric epithelial cell growth during gastric mucosal healing.

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