Examples of secretin in the following topics:
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- In order to neutralize the acidic chyme, a hormone called secretin stimulates the pancreas to produce alkaline bicarbonate solution and deliver it to the duodenum.
- Secretin acts in tandem with another hormone called cholecystokinin (CCK).
- Hormones, such as secretin and cholecystokinin, play important roles in digestive processes.
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- Pancreatic juice secretion is regulated by the hormones secretin and cholecystokinin.
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- Chyme also stimulates duodenal enteroendocrine cells to release secretin and cholecystokinin.
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- Secretin is in the duodenum and signals the secretion of sodium bicarbonate in the pancreas and it stimulates the bile secretion in the liver.
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- The hormone secretin also causes bicarbonate to be released into the small intestine from the pancreas, neutralizing the potentially harmful acid coming from the stomach.
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- These hormones fall into three major categories: the gastrin family, the secretin family, and a third family composed of the remaining hormones that fit into neither of the these two families.
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- Some of the hormones produced include gastrin, secretin, and cholecystokinin, which are secreted in the presence of food.
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- In Gram-negative cells, due to the presence of an extra membrane, the DNA requires the presence of a channel formed by secretins on the outer membrane.
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- In a different and rare manner secretin, which is produced in the small intestine and primarily effects the pancreas, will also diminish acid secretion in the stomach.
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- The exocrine function of the pancreas is controlled by the hormones gastrin, cholecystokinin, and secretin, which are hormones secreted by cells in the stomach and duodenum in response to food.