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1.
Inhibitory effects of cysteamine on neuroendocrine function   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The action of cysteamine on anterior pituitary hormone secretion was studied in vivo using conscious, freely moving male rats and in vitro using anterior pituitary cells in monolayer culture. Administration of 500 micrograms cysteamine into the lateral cerebral ventricles of normal rats caused the complete inhibition of pulsatile GH secretion for a minimum of 6 h. This treatment also significantly decreased plasma concentrations of LH for at least 6 h in orchiectomized rat, TSH in short-term (0.5 month) thyroidectomized rats, and PRL in long-term (6 months) thyroidectomized rats. The in vivo stimulation of GH, LH, TSH and PRL with their respective releasing hormones 60 min after administration of cysteamine was not different from the response observed in rats pretreated with saline except for PRL where cysteamine pretreatment significantly inhibited the expected PRL increase. In vitro, 1 mM cysteamine decreased basal and TRH stimulated PRL release while not affecting basal or stimulated GH, LH, TSH and ACTH secretion. These data demonstrate the dramatic and wide-ranging effects of cysteamine on anterior pituitary hormone secretion. This action appears to be mediated through hypothalamic pathways for GH, LH and TSH and through a pituitary pathway for PRL.  相似文献   

2.
We have examined the effects of third cerebroventricular (3V) injections of avian and bovine pancreatic polypeptide (APP and BPP) and the C-terminal hexapeptide amide of human PP (CHPP) on the secretion of anterior pituitary hormones in conscious ovariectomized rats. Injection of APP (2.0 micrograms; 472 pmoles) or BPP (5.0 micrograms; 1191 pmoles) decreased plasma levels of luteinizing hormone (LH) when compared to pre-injection levels in these animals or to saline-injected controls. The lower dose of BPP (0.5 micrograms; 119 pmoles) decreased plasma LH versus pre-injection levels and control animals, however, these effects diminished at later times. Plasma growth hormone (GH) also decreased following 3V injections of APP (2.0 micrograms) or BPP (5.0 micrograms). The lower dose of BPP (0.5 microgram) initially inhibited GH release, however, this effect was rapidly reversed and GH levels were significantly greater than those in controls at 60 and 120 min. Injections of BPP or APP did not alter prolactin (PRL) or thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) secretion. Administration of 2.0 micrograms and 0.2 microgram of CHPP (2488 and 249 pmoles) produced no significant effects on plasma LH, GH, PRL or TSH. APP and BPP had no consistent effects on hormone secretion from dispersed anterior pituitary cells. The results indicate that APP and BPP exert potent central effects which inhibit LH and GH release from the pituitary gland.  相似文献   

3.
Influence of endogenous opiates on anterior pituitary function   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
In general, the endogenous opioid peptides (EOP), morphine (MOR), and related drugs exert similar effects on acute release of pituitary hormones. Thus administration of opiates produces a rapid increase in release of prolactin (PRL), growth hormone (GH), adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), and antidiuretic hormone (ADH), and a decrease in release of gonadotropins and thyrotropin (TSH). Although not yet fully established, there is growing evidence that the EOP participate in the physiological regulation of pituitary hormone secretion. Thus naloxone (NAL), a specific opiate antagonist, has been shown to reduce basal serum levels of PRL and GH, and to elevate serum levels of LH and follicle stimulating hormone in male rats. Other reports have shown that NAL can inhibit the stress-induced rise in serum PRL, raise the castration-induced increase in serum LH to greater than normal castrate values, and counteract the inhibitory effects of estrogen and testosterone on LH secretion. Opiates appear to have no direct action on the pituitary, but there is evidence that they can alter activity of hypothalamic dopamine and serotonin in modulating secretion of pituitary hormones.  相似文献   

4.
Endocrine actions of opioids   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The widespread occurrence of opioid peptides and their receptors in brain and periphery correlates with a variety of actions elicited by opioid agonists and antagonists on hormone secretion. Opioid actions on pituitary and pancreatic peptides are summarized in Table 1. In rats opioids stimulate ACTH and corticosterone secretion while an inhibition of ACTH and cortisol levels was observed in man. In both species, naloxone, an opiate antagonist, stimulates the release of ACTH suggesting a tonic suppression by endogenous opioids. In rats, a different stimulatory pathway must be assumed through which opiates can stimulate secretion of ACTH. Both types of action are probably mediated within the hypothalamus. LH is decreased by opioid agonists in many adult species while opiate antagonists elicit stimulatory effects, both apparently by modulating LHRH release. A tonic, and in females, a cyclic opioid control appears to participate in the regulation of gonadotropin secretion. Exogenous opiates potently stimulate PRL and GH secretion in many species. Opiate antagonists did not affect PRL or GH levels indicating absence of opioid control under basal conditions, while a decrease of both hormones by antagonists was seen after stimulation in particular situations. In rats, opiate antagonists decreased basal and stress-induced secretion of PRL. Data regarding TSH are quite contradictory. Both inhibitory and stimulatory effects have been described. Oxytocin and vasopressin release were inhibited by opioids at the posterior pituitary level. There is good evidence for an opioid inhibition of suckling-induced oxytocin release. Opioids also seem to play a role in the regulation of vasopressin under some conditions of water balance. The pancreatic hormones insulin and glucagon are elevated by opioids apparently by an action at the islet cells. Somatostatin, on the contrary, was inhibited. An effect of naloxone on pancreatic hormone release was observed after meals which contain opiate active substance. Whether opioids play a physiologic role in glucose homeostasis remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

5.
Morphine and the endogenous opioid peptides (EOP) exert similar effects on the neuroendocrine system. When adminstered acutely, they stimulate growth hormone (GH), prolactin (PRL), and adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) release, and inhibit release of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH),and thyrotropin (TSH). Recent studies indicate that the EOP probably have a physiological role in regulating pituitary hormone secretion. Thus injection of naloxone (opiate antagonist) alone in rats resulted in a rapid fall in serum concentrations of GH and PRL, and a rise in serum LH and FSH, suggesting that the EOP help maintain basal secretion of these hormones. Prior administration of naloxone or naltrexon inhibited stress-induced PRL release, and elevated serum LH in castrated male rats to greater than normal castrate levels. Studies on the mechanisms of action of the EOP and morphine on hormone secretion indicate that they have no direct effect on the pituitary, but act via the hypothalamus. There is no evidence that the EOP or morphine alter the action of the hypothalamic hypophysiotropic hormones on pituitary hormone secretion; they probably act via hypothalamic neurotransmitters to influence release of the hypothalamic hormones into the pituitary portal vessels. Preliminary observations indicate that they may increase serotonin and decrease dopamine metabolism in the hypothalamus, which could account for practically all of their effects on pituitary hormone secretion.  相似文献   

6.
Transplantation of the anterior pituitary to an ectopic site leads to stimulation of PRL secretion and suppression of the release of other adenohypophyseal hormones. We have previously reported that precursors and blockers of catecholamine synthesis can affect PRL release from the ectopic pituitary. In the present study we have measured the effects of L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA), DL-threo-dihydroxyphenylserine (DOPS), alpha-methyl-para-tyrosine (alpha-mpt) and diethyldithiocarbamate (ddc) on plasma growth hormone (GH) and thyrotropin (TSH) levels in hypophysectomized rats with pituitary transplants under the renal capsule. In these animals, peripheral plasma GH levels were elevated by a precursor (DOPA) and reduced by a blocker (alpha-mpt) of catecholamine synthesis. Plasma TSH levels were increased by a precursor (DOPS) and reduced by a blocker (ddc) of norepinephrine synthesis. We suspect that GH and TSH present in the circulation of pituitary-grafted animals were derived, in part, from the ectopic pituitary tissue and suggest that the small but detectable secretion of hormones other than PRL in this animal model is under the control of endogenous catecholamines.  相似文献   

7.
The influence of dexamethasone treatment on the basal values of corticosterone, GH, prolactin (PRL), LH and FSH, as well as on the adenohypophyseal hormone response to chronic stress was studied in female rats. Dexamethasone acetate (25 micrograms/100 b.w.), given by gavage twice daily for 10 days, decreased the resting plasma levels of corticosterone, GH, LH and PRL, whereas the FSH titers remained normal. The secretion of ACTH (evaluated indirectly through corticosterone concentrations) and of GH appeared to be most sensitive to the suppressive effect of dexamethasone. The same hormonal response pattern was induced by 8 h of daily immobilization for 10 days, except that ACTH release was enhanced and the plasma LH titers dropped more drastically. Dexamethasone administration in combination with restraint did not alter the characteristic hormonal profile of chronic stress, despite the fact that ACTH secretion was completely blocked. These data suggest that the inhibition of PRL, LH and GH secretion following severe, chronic stress is not causally related to the sustained elevation of plasma ACTH.  相似文献   

8.
Prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) are known to be able to act as antimetamorphic hormones. From investigations of how PRL inhibits Xenopus tail regression in vitro, it was found that the both hormones could, in addition to their known antimetamorphic actions, upregulate mRNA expression of type III iodothyronine 5-deiodinase (5D), an enzyme that inactivates thyroid hormones (TH). Conversely, both PRL and GH were found to downregulate 5D mRNA expression in the liver. Blockage by PRL of TH-induced tail regression in organ culture was released by treatment with iopanoic acid (IOP, an inhibitor of 5D activity). The IOP-released tail regression displayed a unique morphology of the larger fins retained on the regressing tails, consistent with the finding that mRNA for both PRL receptor and 5D were enriched in the fin. The results suggest that the metamorphosis-modulating actions of PRL and GH are mediated, at least partially, by tissue-specific regulation of 5D mRNA expression.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The ovary and adenohypophysis of the rat contain beta-adrenergic receptors and respond to beta-adrenergic stimulation with hormone release. To determine the importance of the adrenal medulla as a source of adrenergic influences regulating prepubertal ovarian and pituitary function, a technique was developed to remove most of the adrenal medulla without compromising adrenocortical function. Medullectomy (MED) of 24-day-old female rats depressed both spontaneous diurnal changes in plasma epinephrine (EPI), and the EPI and norepinephrine (NE) response to decapitation, without affecting corticosterone (B) levels. Vaginal opening and first ovulation were delayed in MED rats. Serum luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels were normal in MED rats, but those of growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (Prl) were depressed. MED reduced the ovarian weight response to pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin (PMSG) and the ovarian steroidal response to human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) in vitro, but it did not affect ovarian beta-adrenergic receptors. Cultured granulosa cells, harvested from juvenile ovaries and primed in vitro with FSH, responded to nanomolar concentrations of EPI with progesterone (P) secretion. EPI also augmented hCG- and FSH-induced P secretion. The EPI effect was reproduced by Zinterol, a beta 2-adrenergic agonist and was prevented by propranolol, a beta-adrenergic antagonist. Blockade of alpha-adrenergic receptors with phentolamine was ineffective. It is suggested that EPI of adrenomedullary origin supports female prepubertal development by a) stimulating ovarian P secretion, b) favoring Prl and GH release and c) amplifying the stimulatory effect of low gonadotropin levels on ovarian steroidogenesis. The effects of EPI on ovarian function appear to be mediated by beta-adrenergic receptors of the beta 2 type.  相似文献   

11.
DBcAMP significantly increased the release of GH but not of LH, FSH, TSH, or PRL, except in the presence of hypothalamic extract when it augmented the release of LH, FSH, and GH, reversed the inhibition of PRL, but did not further influence TSH release. Theophylline increased release of GH and PRL while inducing increased tissue content of cAMP without consistently increasing the release of TSH, LH, or FSH. Hypothalamic extractor K+-stimulated hormone rel-ase was consistently and significantly potentiated by theophylline. Neither hypothalamic extract, increased [K+], or synthetic TRH and LRH were able to raise tissue content of cAMP while producing their expected effects on hormone release. Cholera enterotoxin produced a highly significant increase in tissue content of the cyclic nucleotide but increased the release of GH only, and not that of LH, FSH, TSH, or PRL. DBcAMP was able to lower the threshold concentration of K+ required to stimulate release of GH, LH, and FSH and also to augment K+-stimulated release to the higher levels induced by the hypothalamic releasing hormones. It did not augment K+-induced release of TSH.  相似文献   

12.
K.D. Fagin  J.D. Neill 《Life sciences》1982,30(13):1135-1141
The relationship between prolactin (PRL) secretion and the neurointermediate lobe (NIL) of the pituitary gland was investigated. Plasma PRL concentrations in rats bearing anterior pituitaries autografted with or without the NIL to the renal capsule were elevated to equal extents at 1 through 6 weeks after surgery (p > 0.10). PRL levels in ovariectomized rats in which the NIL had been removed surgically (NIL-X) or only visualized (NIL-C) were 3–7 ng/ml 4, 7, and 28 days after surgery (p > 0.10); however, they were slightly higher in NIL-X vs. NIL-C rats 14 days after surgery (p < 0.05). Plasma luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations in NIL-C rats increased by 36% from 2 to 4 weeks after surgery (p < 0.05); this increase was not detected in NIL-X rats. PRL and LH surges were induced by estradiol implants in ovariectomized NIL-X and NIL-C rats; the profiles of the PRL surges were superimposable, although the magnitude of the LH surge was only 50% that in NIL-C rats (p < 0.05). These results cast doubt on the importance of the NIL in the regulation of PRL secretion either via secreting hypophysiotropic hormones or via conducting anterior pituitary hormones directly to the median eminence. However, the NIL may have a physiologically important role in the regulation of LH secretion.  相似文献   

13.
Growth hormone (GH) is known to play a key role in the regulation of body growth and metabolism. Similar to mammals, GH secretion in fish is under the control of hypothalamic factors. Besides, signals generated within the pituitary and/or from peripheral tissues/organs can also exert a feedback control on GH release by effects acting on both the hypothalamus and/or anterior pituitary. Among these feedback signals, the functional role of IGF is well conserved from fish to mammals. In contrast, the effects of steroids and thyroid hormones are more variable and appear to be species-specific. Recently, a novel intrapituitary feedback loop regulating GH release and GH gene expression has been identified in fish. This feedback loop has three functional components: (i) LH induction of GH release from somatotrophs, (ii) amplification of GH secretion by GH autoregulation in somatotrophs, and (iii) GH feedback inhibition of LH release from neighboring gonadotrophs. In this article, the mechanisms for feedback control of GH synthesis and secretion are reviewed and functional implications of this local feedback loop are discussed. This intrapituitary feedback loop may represent a new facet of pituitary research with potential applications in aquaculture and clinical studies.  相似文献   

14.
Adiponectin is a hormone secreted from adipose tissue, and serum levels are decreased with obesity and insulin resistance. Because prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) can affect insulin sensitivity, we investigated the effects of these hormones on the regulation of adiponectin in human adipose tissue in vitro and in rodents in vivo. Adiponectin secretion was significantly suppressed by PRL and GH in in vitro cultured human adipose tissue. Furthermore, PRL increased adiponectin receptor 1 (AdipoR1) mRNA expression and GH decreased AdipoR2 expression in the cultured human adipose tissue. In transgenic mice expressing GH, and female mice expressing PRL, serum levels of adiponectin were decreased. In contrast, GH receptor deficient mice had elevated adiponectin levels, while PRL receptor deficient mice were unaffected. In conclusion, we demonstrate gene expression of AdipoR1 and AdipoR2 in human adipose tissue for the first time, and show that these are differentially regulated by PRL and GH. Both PRL and GH reduced adiponectin secretion in human adipose tissue in vitro and in mice in vivo. Decreased serum adiponectin levels have been associated with insulin resistance, and our data in human tissue and in transgenic mice suggest a role for adiponectin in PRL and GH induced insulin resistance.  相似文献   

15.
Somatostatin plays an important role in the regulation of the episodic and ultradian rhythm of growth hormone (GH) secretion. Passive immunization of rats with specific antibodies to the 14 and 28 amino acid sequences caused a significant GH elevation. The fact that somatostatin antiserum was unable to block episodic GH surges indicates that this hormone's release must be regulated by a dual mechanism. Indeed, GH-releasing factor (GRF) seems to be instrumental in the maintenance of pulsatile GH secretion. Moreover, exogenous GRF induced a further GH increase predominantly during the period of active secretion. Neutralization of endogenous somatostatin eliminated this time-dependent effect, indicating that this peptide blocks periodical spontaneous GH release. Food deprivation and changes in glucose homeostasis virtually obliterate the ultradian GH rhythm. In this context, peripheral somatostatin seems to play an important role. Also the central GRF/somatostatin interplay is responsible for a short-loop feedback control on pituitary somatotrops.  相似文献   

16.
Summary In cell cultures derived from anterior pituitary glands of rats, enzyme activities of cell homogenates and hormone (GH, PRL, LH, and FSH) content of the culture media were measured. Sex differences in enzyme activities representing major metabolic pathways (citrate cycles, pentose cycles, and glycolysis) were demonstrated both in freshly dispersed cells and in 8-day-old cultures; in cultures of both sexes enzyme activities increased during cultivation. In cultures derived from female rats, cell protein doubled by the 12th day and remained constant for up to the 24th day in culture, whereas enzyme activities showed changes suggesting that cell metabolism shifted to anaerobic glycolysis during cultivation. In the culture media the presence of four pituitary hormones was demonstrated for as long as 3 weeks of cultivation with variable secretion dynamics; the release of gonadotropic hormones diminished gradually whereas that of GH remained constant and PRL levels increased with time. These results indicate that under strictly defined culture conditions pituitary cells may function in spite of profound metabolic changes.  相似文献   

17.
Prolactin and growth hormone in the regulation of the immune system   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Evidence implicating prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) in the regulation of the immune system has been reviewed. Hypophysectomized animals have deficiencies in both cell-mediated and humoral immunological functions and either PRL or GH corrects these deficiencies. Animals administered bromocryptine, a drug that specifically blocks PRL release, have impaired immune responses similar to hypophysectomized animals, and again both PRL and GH correct these deficiencies. Genetically dwarf animals, which lack both PRL and GH, are also immunocompromised, and once again PRL and GH can correct the deficiencies. In dwarf animals, however, fewer studies have examined PRL actions. In growth-deficient children, immune function is not dramatically altered and basal secretion of GH has been reported. Very few clinical studies have examined whether PRL secretion is also deficient, and this may explain why a clear loss in immune function is not evident in growth-deficient children. In a number of species, including man, both PRL and GH stimulate thymic function and increase the secretion of thymulin, a thymic hormone. No studies, however, have reported on the effects of PRL and GH on other thymic hormones. A number of studies have reported in vitro effects of PRL and GH on cells involved with immunity, and the presence of high-affinity PRL and GH receptors have been observed on a number of these cells. The action of GH on the proliferative response of cells involved with immunity in vitro appears to be mediated by the production of insulin-like growth factor I. The effect of PRL on insulin-like growth factor I production by these cells has not been examined. One of the most consistent findings from in vitro studies is that prolactin antisera blocked a number of immune reactions. This led to the discovery that cells involved with immunity appear capable of producing PRL and GH, but the physiological significance of these observations have not been explored. There is a great need to identify the cell types responding to PRL and GH and this should be a goal of future investigations. There is also a need for investigators to be aware that both PRL and GH are involved in the regulation of the immune system and to design experiments to elucidate where each functions in the maturation cascade of cells involved with immunity. From the evidence available, it is apparent that PRL and GH have an important function in the immune system and future investigations should be directed toward elucidating their site(s) of action.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of thyroid hormones on prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) synthesis by the rat anterior pituitary gland were assessed in vitro. A marked reduction (84-87%) in the rate of H3-leucine incorporation into GH was evident 2-4 weeks after thyroidectomy, while incorporation into PRL was 52-71% less than that measured in glands from intact rats. A single injection of T4 (200 mug/kg) administered to thyroidectomized (THX) rats 48 hr before sacrifice significantly increased incorporation into both pituitary hormones, although the stimulation of GH synthesis was much more dramatic. Perphenazine, alpha-methyltyrosine and estrogen enhanced the rate of PRL synthesis in intact rats. Thyroid ablation did not affect the response to perphenazine, but significantly increased the response to alpha-methyltyrosine and estrogen. On the other hand, administration of T4 to THX rats receiving perphenazine, alpha-methyltyrosine or estrogen diminished the stimulatory influence of these treatments on PRL synthesis. Perphenazine, alpha-methyltyrosine and estrogen had no effect on the rate of GH synthesis in THX rats, nor did they alter the ability of T4 to restore GH synthesis in these animals. These results indicate that GH synthesis in the rat is dependent upon thyroid hormones and support the concept that these hormones exert their stimulatory effect directly on pituitary somatotrophs. Pituitary lactotrophs, however, appear to retain much of their capacity to synthesize PRL under conditions of thyroid deficiency. The changes in pituitary PRL levels and synthesis rate induced by thyroid ablation might reflect differences in the number rather than the activity of these cells.  相似文献   

19.
In cell cultures derived from anterior pituitary glands of rats, enzyme activities of cell homogenates and hormone (GH, PRL, LH, and FSH) content of the culture media were measured. Sex differences in enzyme activities representing major metabolic pathways (citrate cycles, pentose cycles, and glycolysis) were demonstrated both in freshly dispersed cells and in 8-day-old cultures; in cultures of both sexes enzyme activities increased during cultivation. In cultures derived from female rats, cell protein doubled by the 12th day and remained constant for up to the 24th day in culture, whereas enzyme activities showed changes suggesting that cell metabolism shifted to anaerobic glycolysis during cultivation. In the culture media the presence of four pituitary hormones was demonstrated for as long as 3 weeks of cultivation with variable secretion dynamics; the release of gonadotropic hormones diminished gradually whereas that of GH remained constant and PRL levels increased with time. These results indicate that under strictly defined culture conditions pituitary cells may function in spite of profound metabolic changes.  相似文献   

20.
Daily rhythms of secretion have been described for luteinizing hormone (LH) and prolactin (PRL) from the anterior pituitary of rats. Using selective opioid antagonists, we found that mu and kappa opioid receptor ligands regulate LH and PRL secretion and, of particular interest, that the magnitude of opioidergic effects varies with the time of day. In addition, incomplete temporal overlapping of the LH and PRL responses to the antagonists suggests that different endogenous opioid pathways, with different temporal profiles of peptide release, may control each of these hormones.  相似文献   

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