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1.
The role of androgen in the sexual dimorphism in hypothalamic growth hormone (GH)-releasing hormone (GHRH) and somatostatin (SS) gene expression was examined in rats. In the first study, the SS and GHRH mRNA levels were measured in both male and female rats at 4, 6, 8, and 10 weeks of age. A significant sex-related difference in the SS and GHRH mRNA levels was observed after 8 weeks of age, when sexual maturation is fully attained. Male rats had higher SS and GHRH mRNA levels than the female rats. In the second study, adult ovariectomized rats received daily injection of dihydrotestosterone (DHT), nonaromatizable testosterone, at a dose of 2 mg/rat for 21 days. The DHT treatment masculinized the GH secretory pattern, which was indistinguishable from that of intact male rats, and simultaneously augmented the SS and GHRH mRNA levels. The DHT treatment of ovariectomized rats after hypophysectomy significantly raised the level of SS mRNA, but not that of GHRH mRNA compared to the control animals. These findings suggest that the activation of the SS gene expression through androgen receptor plays an important role in the maintenance of sexual dimorphism in GH secretion in rats.  相似文献   

2.
目的:探讨睡眠中间断低氧对大鼠下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴和生长激素水平的影响.方法:大鼠分别给予吸入空气,持续低氧和间断低氧气体,在1 d,3 d,7 d和30 d后测定下丘脑促肾上腺皮质激素释放激素(CRH)和生长激素释放激素(GHRH)mRNA水平,并测定30d后血浆CRH,GHRH,促肾上腺皮质激素(ACTH)和皮质酮水平,分析其间的变化关系.结果:与对照组比较,在低氧后1 d,3 d,7 d后大鼠下丘脑CRH mRNA升高,GHRH mRNA降低,在30 d后,间断低氧组下丘脑CRH mRNA升高,GHRH mRNA降低,而持续低氧组则接近正常.间断低氧30 d后,血浆CRH、ACTH,皮质酮均升高,GHRH降低,而生长激素没有明显变化.结论:大鼠睡眠中慢性间断低氧可以引起下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴激素水平升高,反馈调节紊乱,可引起GHRH分泌抑制.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of thyroid hormone deficiency and growth hormone (GH) treatment on hypothalamic GH-releasing hormone (GHRH)/somatostatin (SS) concentrations, GHRH/SS mRNA levels, and plasma GH and somatomedin-C (IGF-I) concentrations were studied in 28- and 35-day-old rats made hypothyroid by giving dams propylthiouracil in the drinking water since the day of parturition. Hypothyroid rats, at both 28 and 35 days of life, had decreased hypothalamic GHRH content and increased GHRH mRNA levels, unaltered SS content and SS mRNA levels, and reduced plasma GH and IGF-I concentrations. Treatment of hypothyroid rats with GH for 14 days completely restored hypothalamic GHRH content and reversed the increase in GHRH mRNA, but did not alter plasma IGF-I concentrations. These data indicate that, in hypothyroid rats, the changes in hypothalamic GHRH content and gene expression are due to the GH deficiency ensuing from the hypothyroid state. Failure of the GH treatment to increase plasma IGF-I indicates that the feedback regulation on GHRH neurons is operated by circulating GH and/or perhaps tissue but not plasma IGF-I concentrations. Presence of low plasma IGF-I concentrations would be directly related to thyroid hormone deficiency.  相似文献   

4.
Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) is a main inducer of growth hormone (GH) pulses in most species studied to date. There is no information regarding the pattern of GHRH secretion as a regulator of GH gene expression. We investigated the roles of the parameters of exogenous GHRH administration (frequency, amplitude, and total amount) upon induction of pituitary GH mRNA, GH content, and somatic growth in the female rat. Continuous GHRH infusions were ineffective in altering GH mRNA levels, GH stores, or weight gain. Changing GHRH pulse amplitude between 4, 8, and 16 microg/kg at a constant frequency (Q3.0 h) was only moderately effective in augmenting GH mRNA levels, whereas the 8 microg/kg and 16 microg/kg dosages stimulated weight gain by as much as 60%. When given at a 1.5-h frequency, GHRH doubled the amount of GH mRNA, elevated pituitary GH stores, and stimulated body weight gain. In the rat model, pulsatile but not continuous GHRH administration is effective in inducing pituitary GH mRNA and GH content as well as somatic growth. These studies suggest that the greater growth rate, pituitary mRNA levels, and GH stores seen in male compared with female rats are likely mediated, in part, by the endogenous episodic GHRH secretory pattern present in males.  相似文献   

5.
Expression of human growth hormone (hGH) was targeted to growth hormone-releasing (GRF) neurons in the hypothalamus of transgenic rats. This induced dominant dwarfism by local feedback inhibition of GRF. One line, bearing a single copy of a GRF-hGH transgene, has been characterized in detail, and has been termed Tgr (for Transgenic growth-retarded). hGH was detected by immunocytochemistry in the brain, restricted to the median eminence of the hypothalamus. Low levels were also detected in the anterior pituitary gland by radioimmunoassay. Transgene expression in these sites was confirmed by RT-PCR. Tgr rats had reduced hypothalamic GRF and mRNA, in contrast to the increased GRF expression which accompanies GH deficiency in other dwarf rats. Endogenous GH mRNA, GH content, pituitary size and somatotroph cell number were also reduced significantly in Tgr rats. Pituitary adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels were normal, but prolactin content, mRNA levels and lactotroph cell numbers were also slightly reduced, probably due to feedback inhibition of prolactin by the lactogenic properties of the hGH transgene. This is the first dominant dwarf rat strain to be reported and will provide a valuable model for evaluating the effects of transgene expression on endogenous GH secretion, as well as the use of GH secretagogues for the treatment of dwarfism.  相似文献   

6.
In order to find a chronic GHRH administration capable of stimulating growth rate without depleting pituitary GH content, prepubertal female rats were subcutaneously (sc) treated with GHRH (1-29)-NH2 and somatostatin (SS). In experiment 1, the rats received sc injections of GHRH and cyclic natural SS for 19 days. In the second study, female rats were continuously treated during 21 days with GHRH, using a slow release pellet, alone or combined with one daily injection of long acting SS (octreotide). In experiment 1, body weight was significantly increased when GHRH was administered at the highest daily dosage (1200 microg/day), accompanied by an slight increment in pituitary GH content. Hypothalamic SS concentrations decreased when GHRH or SS were administered alone whereas the combined treatment with both peptides did not modify this parameter, which suggests the existence of a balance between the chronic actions of both peptides on hypothalamus. In experiment 2, the continuous infusion of GHRH increased plasma GH levels and tended to enhance pituitary GH content. Nevertheless, GHRH effect was not effective enough to increase body weight. By adding one daily injection of SS both GHRH effects on the pituitary gland were abolished. Our study indicates that female rats retain responsiveness to chronic GHRH and SS treatments at both pituitary and hypothalamic levels.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Long-term (7 and 14 days) hypophysectomy resulted in a striking decrease in growth hormone releasing hormone-like immunoreactivity (GHRH-LI) in the median eminence (ME) of adult male rats, evaluated by both radioimmunoassay and immunohistochemistry. Treatment with human GH (125 μg/rat, twice daily IP for 14 days) prevented, though partially, depletion of GHRH-LI from the ME, as assessed by both methods. These results demonstrate that circulating GH levels regulate the function of GHRH-producing structures, via a feedback mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
Cyproheptadine (CPH)--a putative serotonin antagonist--is known to inhibit growth hormone (GH) response to various pharmacological stimuli, as well as during sleep. To elucidate the possible site at which this drug takes effect, we examined plasma GH and somatostatin response to i.v. GHRH1-44 (1 microgram/kg body wt.) before and after CPH treatment in 10 healthy volunteers. The oral administration of CPH (8-12 mg daily for 5 days; total dose 56 mg) significantly curbed GH response to GHRH as expressed in peak plasma GH values (32.0 +/- 6.1 micrograms/l vs. 12.6 +/- 3.2 micrograms/l; P less than 0.01) and in integrated GH response area (2368 +/- 517 micrograms x l-1 x 2 h vs. 744 +/- 172 micrograms x l-1 x 2 h; P less than 0.01). Plasma somatostatin levels did not change in response to GHRH.  相似文献   

10.
R F Walker  S W Yang  B B Bercu 《Life sciences》1991,49(20):1499-1504
Aging is associated with a blunted growth hormone (GH) secretory response to GH-releasing hormone (GHRH), in vivo. The objective of the present study was to assess the effects of aging on the GH secretory response to GH-releasing hexapeptide (GHRP-6), a synthetic GH secretagogue. GHRP-6 (30 micrograms/kg) was administered alone or in combination with GHRH (2 micrograms/kg) to anesthetized female Fischer 344 rats, 3 or 19 months of age. The peptides were co-administered to determine the effect of aging upon the potentiating effect of GHRP-6 on GHRH activity. The increase in plasma GH as a function of time following administration of GHRP-6 was lower (p less than 0.001) in old rats than in young rats; whereas the increase in plasma GH secretion as a function of time following co-administration of GHRP-6 and GHRH was higher (p less than 0.001) in old rats than in young rats (mean Cmax = 8539 +/- 790.6 micrograms/l vs. 2970 +/- 866 micrograms/l, respectively; p less than 0.01). Since pituitary GH concentrations in old rats were lower than in young rats (257.0 +/- 59.8 micrograms/mg wet wt. vs. 639.7 +/- 149.2 micrograms/mg wet wt., respectively; p less than 0.03), the results suggested that GH functional reserve in old female rats was not linked to pituitary GH concentration. The differential responses of old rats to individually administered and co-administered GHRP-6 are important because they demonstrate that robust and immediate GH secretion can occur in old rats that are appropriately stimulated. The data further suggest that the cellular processes subserving GH secretion are intact in old rats, and that age-related decrements in GH secretion result from inadequate stimulation, rather than to maladaptive changes in the mechanism of GH release.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Male rat liver microsomes contain a low-affinity glucocorticoid binding site (LAGS) capable of binding all natural glucocorticoids and progesterone with a Kd from 20 to 100 nM. The LAGS level is under endocrine control by T3, glucocorticoids and GH. These hormones act synergistically at physiological concentrations to increase the LAGS level. Since female rats show a LAGS level that is much lower than the males (0.15 vs 23 pmol/mg protein, respectively), here we investigated whether estradiol could decrease the LAGS in the male rat. Orchiectomized (OX) male rats showed a higher LAGS level than intact rats. This effect was reversed by implanting a Sylastic capsule containing testosterone. When the OX rats were implanted for 20 days with estrogen capsules that provided an estradiol level in serum of 40 pg/ml, their LAGS level decreased from 23 to 0.2 pmol/mg protein. This effect was not observed in intact male rats and can be partially reversed by testosterone implants into OX rats. Both hypophysectomized male rats and hypothyroid-orchiectomized male rats showed very low levels of LAGS. Administration of physiological doses of GH and/or T3 to these rats greatly increased their LAGS level (from 0.3 to 15 and 16 pmol/mg protein, respectively). Implantation of estrogen capsules to these rats two weeks prior to starting treatment completely inhibited the increase in the LAGS level in response to T3, and significantly decreased the response to hGH, and to a combination of hGH and T3. These results suggest that physiological estradiol levels can antagonize the LAGS induction by T3 and hGH in the male rat, and could be responsible for the low level of LAGS in the female rat. Moreover, estrogen capsules also inhibited the increase in the body and hepatic weights observed after hGH treatment, which suggests a powerful inhibitory effect of low estradiol levels on the male rat liver functions under regulation by T3 and/or GH.  相似文献   

13.
Four groups of adult male hypophysectomized rats were injected subcutaneously twice daily between 0800-0900 hr and 1600-1700 hr with either saline diluent, 150 micrograms sheep prolactin and/or growth hormone (GH); intact rats received either saline or 150 micrograms bromocriptine twice daily. After 4 days of treatment, lysosomal enzyme assays revealed significant elevations in both acid phosphatase and alpha-mannosidase enzyme activities in the Harderian glands of saline-injected hypophysectomized rats compared to those in intact controls. beta-Glucuronidase levels were depressed and hexosaminidase activity unaffected by hypophysectomy treatment alone compared to intact controls. Lysosomal enzyme activities in hypophysectomized animals treated with prolactin were not different from the hypophysectomized control animals. However, treatment with GH alone or in combination with prolactin had a significant inhibitory effect on beta-glucuronidase, hexosaminidase, and alpha-mannosidase enzyme activities in the Harderian gland of hypophysectomized animals. Bromocriptine treatment in intact rats only elevated acid phosphatase activity. In summary, the patterns of responses did not reveal a role for prolactin in the control of Harderian gland lysosomal enzyme activities by the pituitary. However, some of the influence on this target system may be exerted by growth hormone.  相似文献   

14.
125I-Labeled hGH was bound to liver plasma membranes which were obtained from female rats. The binding was displaced by hGH, hPRL, bPRL, rPRL and bGH but not by rGH. This result indicated that hGH was bound to lactogenic binding sites in rat livers. After hypophysectomy, the binding was markedly decreased. Treatment of hypophysectomized rats with hGH (80 micrograms/day) for 10 days increased the binding sites for hGH. These binding sites were different from those found in normal female rat livers because of their high affinity and specificity for hGH. These results indicate that hGH induces specific binding sites for hGH in rat livers.  相似文献   

15.
Expression of the endogenous human GH (hGH) gene in response to glucocorticoids, thyroid hormone, and insulin was studied in cultures of dispersed GH-secreting human pituitary adenomas. Results were compared to those obtained when the hGH gene was transfected into rat pituitary tumor cells (GC). In the human pituitary cells the glucocorticoid dexamethasone [(Dex) 10(-6) M] increased the release of GH and the levels of GH mRNA by 2 to 4-fold (P less than 0.05). T3 (10(-8) M) had no effect on GH mRNA but increased hGH release by 2- to 6-fold (P less than 0.01). Insulin (5 x 10(-9) M) alone had no significant effect on either hGH mRNA or protein, but blunted the effect of Dex. Among 11 of 18 GC cell clones transfected with the hGH gene with detectable hGH mRNA expression, Dex increased hGH mRNA levels in seven and T3 treatment reduced hGH mRNA levels in eight. Conversely, rat GH mRNA levels from the endogenous rat gene were increased by either Dex or T3 in all 18 clones. Insulin alone or in combination with T3 or Dex was found to increase hGH mRNA levels in some cell lines and to decrease hGH mRNA levels in others; these effects were correlated strongly (r = 0.88; P less than 0.001) with the influence of insulin on the endogenous rat GH gene, implying that individual cellular differences can simultaneously affect the insulin responsiveness of both genes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Obesity is characterized by markedly decreased ghrelin and growth hormone (GH) secretion. Ghrelin is a GH-stimulating, stomach-derived peptide that also has orexigenic action. Ghrelin supplement may restore decreased GH secretion in obesity, but it may worsen obesity by its orexigenic action. To reveal effects of ghrelin administration on obese animals, we first examined acute GH and orexigenic responses to ghrelin in three different obese and/or diabetic mouse models: db/db mice, mice on a high-fat diet (HFD mice), and Akita mice for comparison. GH responses to ghrelin were significantly suppressed in db/db, HFD, and Akita mice. Food intake of db/db and Akita mice were basally higher, and further stimulation of food intake by ghrelin was suppressed. Pituitary GH secretagogue receptor mRNA levels in db/db and HFD mice were significantly decreased, which may partly contribute to decreased GH response to ghrelin in these mice. In Akita mice for comparison, decreased hypothalamic GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) mRNA levels may be responsible for decreased GH response, since maximum GH response to ghrelin needs GHRH. When ghrelin was injected into HFD mice with GHRH coadministrated, GH responses to ghrelin were significantly emphasized. HFD mice injected with low-dose ghrelin and GHRH for 10 days did not show weight gain. These results indicate that low-dose ghrelin and GHRH treatment may restore decreased GH secretion in obesity without worsening obesity.  相似文献   

17.
Steroid sulfatase activity was quantified in liver microsomes from hypophysectomized adult female rats treated with estradiol and continuous or intermittent human growth hormone (hGH). Hypophysectomy clearly enhanced sulfatase activity as compared to intact female rats. Normal female values were completely restored by continuous infusion of hGH (1.4 i.u./kg/day). Neither the same dose of hGH given as two daily injections nor estrogen replacement therapy had any effect. It is concluded that liver microsome sulfatase activity in the non-pregnant rat is regulated by the sexually dimorphic secretory pattern of GH.  相似文献   

18.
While chronic glucocorticoid treatment increases pituitary growth hormone (GH) content in rats and primates and increases pituitary GH release in response to growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) in rats, it also inhibits somatic growth. We investigated these opposite actions in rats using the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone. Seven days of dexamethasone treatment (40 micrograms/animal per day) did not alter the frequency of spontaneous GH pulses in conscious, freely-moving animals. The amplitude of the GH pulses in saline and dexamethasone-treated rats was different (P less than 0.01), the latter group having a higher incidence of GH levels less than 95 ng/ml, a lower incidence of GH levels between 96 and 251 ng/ml, and a higher incidence of GH values greater than 480 ng/ml. A 20 microgram/kg per day dose of dexamethasone was sufficient to significantly inhibit growth but was inadequate in enhancing the GH response to an acute injection of GHRH in anesthetized animals. These results support the concept that glucocorticoids exert their catabolic effects on somatic growth in peripheral tissues and not at the pituitary level.  相似文献   

19.
Ghrelin is a recently discovered stomach hormone that stimulates pituitary growth hormone (GH) secretion potently. The purpose of these experiments was to test the hypothesis that a stomach-ghrelin-pituitary-GH axis exists in which either an elevation or reduction in systemic GH levels will exert a negative or positive feedback action, respectively, on stomach ghrelin homeostasis. In rats, GH administration decreased stomach ghrelin mRNA levels and plasma ghrelin levels significantly. In GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) transgenic mice, GHRH overexpression decreased stomach ghrelin peptide levels when compared with control mice. In aged rats (25 months) stomach ghrelin mRNA and peptide levels and plasma ghrelin levels were decreased when compared with young rats (5 months). Because GH secretion is reduced in aged rats, the elevated stomach ghrelin production and secretion may reflect a decreased GH feedback on stomach ghrelin, homeostasis, and secretion. Together, these findings suggest that endogenous pituitary GH exerts a feedback action on stomach ghrelin homeostasis and support the hypothesis that a stomach-ghrelin-pituitary GH axis exists.  相似文献   

20.
In 10-day-old rats made hypothyroid by giving dams propylthiouracil (PTU) in the drinking water since the day of parturition, simultaneous radioimmunoassay (RIA) determinations of basal and stimulated growth hormone (GH) secretion, hypothalamic GH-releasing hormone (GHRH)-like immunoreactivity (LI) content, immunocytochemical localization of somatotrophs, and hypothalamic GHRH-LI-positive structures were performed. The frequency of somatotrophs was also determined. One-day-old hypothyroid rats, whose mothers had been given PTU since the 14th day of pregnancy, were also used for comparison. In 10-day-old hypothyroid rats, pituitary and plasma GH levels and the number of somatotrophs were considerably lower and plasma TSH levels were significantly higher than those in age-matched control rats; however, GHRH-LI titers in the mediobasal hypothalamus and the morphology of GHRH-LI-positive structures were unaltered. In 1-day-old rats the only alteration present, in addition to elevated plasma TSH levels, was a clear-cut decrease in plasma GH levels. An acute challenge with GHRH (20 ng/100 g body wt, sc) or clonidine (15 micrograms/100 g body wt, sc) induced a clear-cut rise in plasma GH levels 15 min postinjection in 10-day-old control rats but failed to do so in age-matched hypothyroid rats. Both compounds failed to rise plasma GH in both hypothyroid and control 1-day-old rats. Taken together these data indicate that in neonatal and infant rats deprivation of thyroid hormones acts primarily to depress pituitary somatotroph function and that possible changes in GHRH-secreting structures represent a later postnatal event.  相似文献   

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