A more complex genetic background, independent of gastrin and possibly implicating altered function or mutation of p53 and other genes is highly suspected for the development of aggressive type III ECL cell carcinomas and PDECs.
RNase protection assay detected the RNA for the gastrin/CCK-B receptor in 11% of the carcinomas investigated, whereas the RNA for the gastrin/CCK-C receptor was demonstrated in 75% and the RNA for gastrin in 86% of the carcinomas investigated.
To evaluate the hypothesis that gastrin is a local growth factor in colonic carcinomas, the expression of gastrin messenger RNA (mRNA) and peptides were examined in five human colon carcinoma cell lines, 12 solid colon carcinomas, and normal colonic tissue.
In this study, in situ detection of gastrin mRNA has been carried out on frozen sections of four human normal antral mucosa samples and of six colonic carcinomas removed from patients with high levels of plasma gastrin, using a gastrin oligonucleotidic DNA probe.