首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
H Houben  C Denef 《Life sciences》1992,50(11):775-780
The bombesin-like peptide neuromedin C (NMC) stimulated the release of growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) from adult male rat anterior pituitary cell aggregates cultured in serum-free medium. This effect, particularly on GH release, was significantly increased when the cells were cultured in the presence of estradiol (E2). The GH response to NMC was not affected by 4 nM dexamethasone (Dex) but was enhanced in the presence of 80 nM Dex. However, the strong stimulatory action of E2 on the GH response to NMC was completely abolished by 4 nM Dex. In contrast, the PRL response to NMC was reduced by 4 nM Dex and this to a proportionally similar extent in the presence or absence of E2. The present data show that glucocorticoids can be both positive and negative regulators of the same response system.  相似文献   

2.
Dihydropyridine (DHP) Ca2+ channel modulators were used to explore the relationship between voltage-gated Ca2+ channels and PRL secretion, synthesis, and mRNA in PRL-secreting pituitary cells. Optical isomers of the Ca2+ channel agonist Bay K 8644 produced stereospecific and opposing effects on L-type Ca2+ current, PRL release, and synthesis in GH3 and GH4C1 cells. (-)-Bay K 8644 (R5417) behaved as a pure agonist, enhancing Ca2+ current several-fold while shifting the current-voltage curve 10-15 mV in the hyperpolarizing direction. The agonist effect was independent of holding potential, but decreased during prolonged Ba2+ or Ca2+ entry. R5417 produced a concentration-dependent increase in acute PRL release and enhanced PRL production by GH cells several-fold during a 72-h period. (+)-Bay K 8644 (R4407) behaved as a weak Ca2+ channel antagonist, inhibiting L-type Ca2+ current, KCl-stimulated PRL secretion, and PRL production at concentrations of 0.5-5 microM. These two isomers produced similar effects on PRL production by normal rat pituitary cells in dispersed culture. R5417 (500 nM) increased PRL produced in 72 h to 233 +/- 8% of the control value. R4407 reduced this quantity by 36 +/- 9%. The effects of the DHPs on PRL mRNA levels were consistent with the effects observed for acute secretion and hormone production. The agonist R5417 increased PRL mRNA 147 +/- 5% over a 30-h period, and the potent DHP Ca2+ channel blocker nimodipine inhibited PRL mRNA production 2-fold. These results demonstrate that racemic Bay K 8644 interacts with L-type Ca2+ channels in normal and transformed pituitary cells as a mixed agonist-antagonist.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Maitotoxin (MTX) is a water-soluble polyether, isolated from the marine dinoflagellate Gambierdiscus toxicus, that stimulates hormone release and Ca2+ influx. We have investigated the action by which MTX induces Ca2+ influx and stimulates prolactin (PRL) release from GH4C1 rat pituitary cells. PRL release elicited by MTX is abolished in a concentration-dependent manner by nimodipine, a dihydropyridine (DHP) antagonist of type L voltage-dependent calcium channels (L-VDCC), indicating that MTX-enhanced PRL release occurs via activation of type L-VDCC. As an initial approach to determine whether MTX interacts directly with VDCC, we examined whether MTX affects the binding of [3H]PN 200-110, a DHP class antagonist, in intact GH4C1 cells. MTX increased the Bmax of [3H]PN 200-110 binding to intact GH4C1 cells from 4.6 +/- 0.03 to 12.5 +/- 2.2 fmol/10(6) cells, without changing the Kd. This indicates that MTX does not bind to the DHP site, but rather suggests that MTX may have an allosteric interaction with the DHP binding site. The effect of MTX on DHP binding was largely (65%) calcium-dependent. We next examined whether MTX alters the membrane potential of GH4C1 cells using the potential sensitive fluorescent dye bisoxonol. Addition of 100 ng/ml MTX to GH4C1 cells caused a membrane depolarization within 2.5 min which reached a plateau at 5 min. The MTX-induced depolarization was not prevented by substitution of impermeant choline ions for Na+. It was similarly unaffected by K+ channel blockers or by depleting the K+ chemical concentration gradient with gramicidin, a monovalent cation pore-forming agent. By contrast, low extracellular Ca2+ totally abolished the depolarization response, and nimodipine at 100 nM substantially reduced the MTX-induced membrane depolarization. These results indicate that the predominant effect of MTX on depolarization is Ca2+ influx through L-VDCC. Taken together, our results indicate that MTX-enhanced PRL release occurs exclusively via activation of type L-VDCC in GH4C1 cells. We suggest that MTX induces an initial slow calcium conductance, possibly via an allosteric interaction with a component of the VDCC complex, which, in turn, initiates a positive feedback mechanism involving calcium-dependent membrane depolarization and voltage-dependent activation of calcium channels.  相似文献   

4.
Verapamil is an organic calcium antagonist which is believed to prevent the passage of calcium (Ca2+) across the cell membrane into the cell. In a rat pituitary perifusion-immunoprecipitation system, verapamil (50 microM) prevents the inhibitory effect of increased extracellular Ca2+ (5.4 mM) on basal and stimulated release of stored, prelabeled [3H]GH and [3H]PRL. [3H]GH release from pituitary explants perifused in standard medium (GIBCO Minimum Essential Medium: 1.8 mM Ca2+) is transiently increased by 50 microM verapamil while [3H]PRL release is suppressed. With continued exposure to 50 microM verapamil, [3H]GH release rates fall below (89.8 +/- 2.1% of base) preverapamil levels while [3H]PRL release rates simply remain suppressed (48.2 +/- 7.3% of base). With 250 microM verapamil, poststimulatory inhibition of [3H]GH release occurs more quickly, and after its withdrawal rebound release of both GH and PRL occur. Inhibition of [3H]GH release by 25 nM somatostatin (SRIF) and post-SRIF rebound [3H]GH release is not prevented by 50 microM verapamil. The early, rapid [3H]GH release phase of 1 mM dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP) stimulation is potentiated by verapamil pretreatment, but only if the verapamil is continued during dbcAMP stimulation. Potassium (21 mM K+)-stimulated release of both 3H-labeled hormones is inhibited after similar pretreatment 50 microM verapamil. Conclusions: (a) verapamil antagonizes the inhibitory effects of increased extracellular Ca2+ on basal or dbcAMP-stimulated [3H]GH and [3H]PRL release; (b) in standard medium (1.8 mM Ca2+), 50 microM verapamil increases basal [3H]GH release suggesting either a direct effect or an antagonism of 1.8 mM extracellular Ca2+; (c) although verapamil-sensitive Ca2+ movement is not necessary for dbcAMP stimulation of [3H]GH release, verapamil potentiates dbcAMP-stimulated release; (d) because verapamil also inhibits K+-stimulated [3H]GH and [3H]PRL release, these observations support previous suggestions that K+- and dbcAMP-stimulated rapid hormone release occurs from different intracellular sites; and (e) because verapamil does not prevent any phase of SRIF action and since these two agents differentially alter K+- and cAMP-stimulated release, their mechanisms of action must partially differ.  相似文献   

5.
Bombesin (BBS) stimulated prolactin (PRL) secretion from monolayer cultures of rat pituitary tumour cells (GH4C1) in a dose-dependent manner with half maximal and maximal effect at 2 nM and 100 nM, respectively. No additional stimulatory effect on PRL secretion was seen when BBS was combined with thyroliberin (TRH) used in concentrations known to give maximal effects, while the effects of BBS and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) were additive. Using a parafusion system, BBS (1 microM) was found to increase PRL secretion within 4 s and the secretion profiles elicited by BBS and TRH (1 microM) were similar. Both BBS and TRH increased inositoltrisphosphate (IP3) as well as inositolbisphosphate (IP2) formation within 2 s. BBS also induced the same biphasic changes in the electrical membrane properties of GH4C1 cells as TRH, and both peptides caused a rapid and sustained increase in intracellular [Ca2+]. These results suggest that BBS stimulates PRL secretion from the GH4C1 cells via a mechanism involving the immediate formation of IP3 thus resembling the action of TRH.  相似文献   

6.
Prolactin (PRL) release in permeable GH3 pituitary cells was stimulated by the protein kinase C activators 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) and 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol (OAG). Both agents stimulated secretion at 10 nM Ca2+, but higher [Ca2+] (greater than 0.1 microM) potentiated TPA and OAG action. Maximal potentiation occurred at 1 microM calculated free Ca2+, and a similar value was obtained when the cytoplasmic [Ca2+] was measured with the Ca2+-sensitive dye Quin 2. Release of a secretory sulfated proteoglycan was also stimulated by TPA and OAG in permeable GH3 cells, with characteristics similar to those for PRL release. Trifluoroperazine, polymyxin B, neomycin, and 8-(diethylamino)octyl-3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate all inhibited both TPA- and Ca2+-stimulated PRL release, but in each case the half-maximal inhibitory concentrations were approximately 2-fold higher for TPA-stimulated release compared to Ca2+-stimulated release. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and guanosine 5'-Q-thiotriphosphate, which stimulate polyphosphoinositide breakdown in permeable cells, were found to be only weak stimulators of PRL release, compared to TPA and exogenous diacylglycerol. However, a much stronger effect of TRH was seen if cells were briefly treated with TRH prior to permeabilization. PRL release from TRH-pretreated permeable cells resembled TPA- and OAG-stimulated secretion, with [Ca2+] greater than 0.1 microM potentiating the effect of TRH pretreatment. These studies support the hypothesis that PRL release in GH3 cells can be stimulated directly by a diacylglycerol-activated secretory mechanism whose activity is modulated by [Ca2+].  相似文献   

7.
Pharmacological agents are widely used to probe the mechanism of action of TRH. A number of these drugs behave as local anesthetics at high concentrations. The effect of local anesthetics on the binding of [3H]Me-TRH to specific receptors was studied using the GH4C1 line of rat pituitary tumor cells. [3H]Me-TRH binding was inhibited by classical local anesthetics with the order of potency (IC50 values): dibucaine (0.37 mM) greater than tetracaine (1.2 mM) greater than lidocaine (3.3 mM) greater than procaine and benzocaine (greater than 10 mM). IC50 values for other drugs with local anesthetic properties that inhibited [3H]Me-TRH were: 100 microM trifluoperazine, 100 microM imipramine, 170 microM chlorpromazine, 300 microM verapamil, and 700 microM propranolol. Inhibition by tetracaine and verapamil increased as the pH was raised from 6 to 8.5, indicating that the free base form of the amine drugs was the inhibitory species, and the local anesthetic effect was greater at 37 C than at 24 C or 0 C. [3H]Me-TRH binding to receptors in isolated membranes was inhibited to the same extent as binding to receptors on intact cells. Local anesthetics were 3- to 20-fold less potent at inhibiting [3H]Me-TRH to digitonin-solubilized receptors than binding to intact cells. In contrast, the potency of chlordiazepoxide, a putative TRH antagonist, to inhibit [3H]Me-TRH binding was equal using cells and solubilized receptors (IC50 = 10 microM). Local anesthetics inhibited TRH-stimulated PRL release and also inhibited basal PRL secretion and secretion stimulated by two nonhormonal secretagogues, (Bu)2cAMP and a phorbol ester.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Bombesin stimulates growth of the stomach and pancreas in adult rats. Part of this effect is thought to be through the release of CCK following bombesin treatment. We studied the effect of long term administration of bombesin on the pancreas and stomach in suckling rats and examined the action of bombesin using specific CCK antagonist (CR-1409) and bombesin antagonists (GRP19-26, D-Phe19, Leu26CH2NHCOCH3 = cpd 17; L-686,095-001C002 = cpd 23). Rat pups (7-days-old) were given bombesin (20 micrograms/kg body wt. twice a day) or vehicle (1% gelatin) for 9 days. Bombesin stimulated pancreatic and gastric growth (tissue weight, total protein and DNA content all increased). Pancreatic trypsinogen concentration and content showed a 2-3-fold increase. CR-1409 at 6 mg/kg body wt., a dose that blocked the trophic action of CCK-33 when given to pups at similar ages, did not affect the bombesin-stimulated growth of the pancreas or the increase in trypsinogen level. At 2.4 mg/kg body wt., cpd 17 partially blocked and cpd 23 completely blocked the trophic effect of bombesin on the pancreas and stomach and the increase in trypsinogen level in the pancreas. RU-486, a type II glucocorticoid receptor antagonist, given at a dose sufficient to block the physiological action of glucocorticoid, had no effect on bombesin-stimulated growth of the pancreas. Thus, in vivo, bombesin acts directly on the neonatal pancreas and stomach.  相似文献   

9.
The role of extracellular Ca2+ in pituitary hormone release was studied in primary cultures of rat anterior pituitary cells. The basal levels of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), thyrotropin (TSH), and adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) secretion were independent of extracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]e). In contrast, the basal levels of growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) release showed dose-dependent increases with elevation of [Ca2+]e, and were abolished by Ca2+-channel antagonists. Under Ca2+-deficient conditions, BaCl2 mimicked the effects of calcium on PRL and GH release but with a marked increase in potency, and also increased basal LH and FSH release in a dose-dependent manner. In the presence of normal [Ca2+]e, depolarization with K+ maximally increased cytosolic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]i) from 100 to 185 nM and elevated LH, FSH, TSH, ACTH, PRL, and GH release by 7-, 5-, 4-, 3-, 2-, and 1.5-fold, respectively. These effects of KCl were abolished in Ca2+-deficient medium or in the presence of the Ca2+-channel antagonist, Co2+, and were diminished by the dihydropyridine Ca2+-channel antagonist, nifedipine. The Ca2+-channel agonist BK 8644 (100 nM) enhanced the hormone-releasing actions of 25 mM KCl upon PRL, LH, FSH, GH, TSH, and ACTH by 2.3-, 2.0-, 1.8-, 1.7-, 1.6-, and 1.4-fold, respectively. The dose- and voltage-dependent actions of BK 8644 were specific for individual cell types; BK 8644 enhanced GH, PRL, TSH, LH, and ACTH secretion in the absence of any depolarizing stimulus, with ED50 values of 8, 10, 150, 200, and 400 nM, respectively. However, in the presence of 50 mM KCl, the ED50 values for BK 8644 were 1.5, 2, 3, 5, and 7 nM for GH, PRL, ACTH, TSH, and LH, respectively. [3H]BK 8644 bound specifically to pituitary membranes with Kd values of 0.8 nM and concentrations of about 900 channels per cell. These observations provide evidence for the presence and participation of voltage-sensitive calcium channels in the secretion of all five populations of anterior pituitary cells.  相似文献   

10.
The high inhibitory potency of the previously developed bombesin antagonist [Leu13, psi CH2NHLeu14]bombesin (analogue I) (IC50 values of 30 and 18 nM for inhibition of bombesin-stimulated amylase secretion from guinea pig acinar cells and Swiss 3T3 cell growth, respectively) diminished considerably when shorter chain lengths were examined. For instance, [Leu13, psi CH2NHLeu14]bombesin-(5-14),[Leu13, psi CH2NHLeu14] bombesin-(6-14), and [Leu9, psi CH2NHLeu10]neuromedin C had IC50 values of 150, 150, and 280 nM, respectively. Incorporation of a D-Phe residue at position 6 of [Leu13, psi CH2NHLeu14] bombesin did not significantly change the various biological parameters. However, its presence in [Leu13, psi CH2NHLeu14]bombesin-(6-14) and at position 2 of psi-neuromedin C-(2-10) resulted in about 10-fold increases in potency up to and above that of the original antagonist. For instance, [D-Phe6,Leu13,psi CH2NHLeu14]bombesin-(6-14) and des-Gly1-[D-Phe2,Leu9,psi CH2NHLeu10]neuromedin C exhibited IC50 values of 5 and 28 nM, respectively. Analogues based on the litorin sequence which contains an NH2-terminal pyroglutamic acid residue at the bombesin position 6 equivalent were also quite potent. The ability of various analogues to interact with bombesin receptors on pancreatic acini correlated reasonably well with potencies derived from inhibition of bombesin-stimulated growth of Swiss 3T3 cells. Additional studies of NH2- and COOH-terminal structure-activity relationships resulted in the synthesis of [D-Phe6,Leu13,psi CH2NHPhe14]bombesin-(6-14), which was particularly effective in inhibiting 3T3 cell growth at high picomolar concentrations (IC50 = 0.72 nM and Ki = 3.1 nM for 3T3 cells; IC50 = 7.5 nM and Ki = 9.9 nM for acini). Detailed investigations with one of the most potent antagonists, [D-Phe6,Leu13,psi CH2NHLeu14]bombesin-(6-14) (Ki = 14 nM for acini cells and 7.1 for 3T3 cells), demonstrated that this analogue was a competitive inhibitor of bombesin and that this activity was specific for the bombesin receptor. Thus, inhibitory potencies have been improved generally up to 25 times over previously reported structures; and, given that bombesin itself has a Ki of 1.2 nM for 3T3 cell binding, some of these analogues are extraordinarily high affinity receptor antagonists. They can also be synthesized more readily and offer fewer proteolytic degradation sites than the original pseudopeptide and should be excellent candidates for in vivo studies aimed at inhibition of bombesin-dependent human small cell lung carcinoma growth.  相似文献   

11.
The substance P(SP)/bombesin (Bn) antagonists [DArg1DTrp7,9Leu11] SP(P-7482), [DArg1-DPro2DTrp7,9Leu11]SP (P-7483), [DArg1DPhe5DTrp7,9Leu11]SP(P-7492), and the growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) antagonist [DArg2Ala8,9,15]GHRH(1-29)(DC21-366) were tested for their in vitro effects on the release of growth hormone (GH) in the presence of GHRH and growth hormone releasing peptide, HisDTrpAlaTrpDPheLysNH2(GHRP). P-7492, P-7483, and P-7482 decreased, dose-dependently, the release of GH by GHRP (IC50 = 0.2 microM, 0.85 microM, and 6 microM, respectively). These antagonists had only a 10-15% inhibitory effect on the stimulated GH release of GHRH even at high dosage. DC21-366 decreased the stimulated release of GH by GHRH (IC50 = 0.16 microM) but not by GHRP. Neither SP nor Bn had GH releasing or inhibitory effects in this system.  相似文献   

12.
In this work we analyze the possibility of serotonin (5-HT)-releasing prolactin (PRL) through a direct action at the pituitary level. 5-HT (2 mg/kg i.v.) stimulates PRL secretion in hypophysectomized autotransplanted animals (HAG) significantly and this effect was not influenced by pretreatment with the dopaminergic antagonist domperidone. In perifused pituitaries, 5-HT administration (0.01, 0.1 and 1 microM for 90 min, or 1, 10, 100 microM for 15 min) was ineffective in stimulating PRL release. In pituitaries obtained from animals previously treated with the neurotoxic 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT) or vehicle and incubated in the presence of 5-HT (2.5, 5 and 10 microM), no response in PRL secretion was observed. These results suggested that 5-HT does not release PRL through a direct pituitary action, and that the effect observed in HAG animals could be mediated through the release of a PRL-releasing factor after 5-HT administration.  相似文献   

13.
Dispersed rat anterior pituitary cells were allowed to reassociate into spherical aggregates by gyrotory shaking in serum-free chemically defined culture medium. When aggregates were superfused after being cultured for 5 days in this medium, stimulation of PRL release by TRH, VIP, angiotensin II and the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol was comparable to that of aggregates cultured in serum-supplemented culture medium. Addition to the serum-free medium of 80 nM dexamethasone (Dex) resulted in a significant enhancement of the stimulation of PRL release by TRH, VIP and angiotensin II but not of the stimulation of PRL release by isoproterenol. Dex also failed to influence the inhibition of PRL release by 10 min exposure to 10 nM dopamine (DA). However, Dex significantly enhanced the post-DA rebound secretion of PRL. After 3 weeks in culture Dex provoked a similar potentiation of the response to angiotensin as at 5 days in culture but it abolished almost completely the stimulatory effect of isoproterenol. It is concluded that pituitary cell aggregates cultured in defined serum-free medium are a reliable system to study the multifactorial control of PRL release. The data show that peptidergic, dopaminergic and beta-adrenergic control at the pituitary level is differentially modulated by corticosteroids.  相似文献   

14.
In a 30-year-old woman with amenorrhea due to hyperprolactinemia, serum PRL increased to twice the basal amount in response to growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH). Roentgenological studies revealed no pituitary adenoma but empty sella. Bromocriptine therapy normalized serum PRL and made the paradoxical response to GHRH disappear. The paradoxical response did not occur in any of eight other patients with hyperprolactinemia due to prolactinoma. Although this case is rare, GHRH stimulates PRL as well as GH release remarkably in some cases with hyperprolactinemia without a GH-producing tumor.  相似文献   

15.
Characterization of bombesin receptors in a rat pituitary cell line   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Bombesin is a tetradecapeptide which stimulates prolactin secretion in rats and man and in cultures of GH4C1 cells, a clonal strain of rat pituitary tumor cells. We have utilized [125I-Tyr4]bombesin to identify and characterize specific high affinity receptors in GH4C1 cells. Scatchard analysis of equilibrium binding data at 4 degrees C indicated the presence of a single class of non-interacting binding sites for bombesin (RT = 3600 +/- 500 sites/cell). The value for the equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd = 1.2 +/- 0.4 nM) agreed closely with the ED50 (0.5 nM) for bombesin stimulation of prolactin release. [125I-Tyr4]Bombesin binding at steady state at 37 degrees C was inhibited by increasing concentrations of unlabeled bombesin in a dose-dependent manner, with an ID50 = 1.4 +/- 0.2 nM. However, binding of [125I-Tyr4] bombesin was not inhibited by 100 nM thyrotropin-releasing hormone, vasoactive intestinal peptide, epidermal growth factor, or somatostatin. Therefore, [125I-Tyr4]bombesin binds to a receptor distinct from the receptors for other peptides which regulate hormone secretion by GH4C1 cells. The analog specificity for high affinity binding showed that the receptors for bombesin recognize the COOH-terminal octapeptide sequence in the molecule. Among five pituitary cell strains tested, two which contained saturable binding sites for [125I-Tyr4]bombesin (GH4C1 and GH3) had previously been shown to respond to bombesin with increased hormone secretion, whereas three which lacked receptors (GC, F4C1, and AtT20/D16v) were unresponsive. Therefore, the [125I-Tyr4]bombesin binding sites appear to be necessary for the biological actions of bombesin. Examination of the processing and metabolism of receptor-bound peptide demonstrated that at 4 degrees C [125I-Tyr4]bombesin binds to receptors on the surface of GH4C1 cells. At 37 degrees C, receptor-bound peptide is rapidly internalized and subsequently degraded in lysosomes. In summary, we have characterized for the first time specific, high affinity pituitary bombesin receptors which are necessary for the biological action of bombesin.  相似文献   

16.
Ghrelin is a gut-brain peptide synthesized mainly in the oxyntic mucosal cells of the stomach, and has potent growth hormone (GH)-releasing and orexigenic activities. Recently, two forms of ghrelin, ghrelin-C8 and -C10, were identified in the Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus). The present study describes in vitro and in vivo effects of these endogenous ghrelins on the GH/insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) axis. Ghrelin-C8 (100 nM) stimulated GH release from primary cultures of pituitary cells after 4 and 8 h of incubation, whereas no effect was seen on prolactin (PRL) release. Stimulatory effects of ghrelin-C8 and -C10 (100 nM) on GH release during 6 h of incubation were blocked by pre-incubation with GHS receptor antagonist, [D-Lys(3)]-GHRP-6 (10 microM). Intraperitoneal injection of ghrelin-C8 (1 ng/g body weight) and -C10 (0.1 and 1 ng/g body weight) significantly increased plasma GH levels after 5 h. Significant increases were observed also in hepatic expression of IGF-I and GH receptor (GHR) mRNA following injections of both forms of ghrelin (0.1 and 1 ng/g body weight), although there was no effect on plasma levels of IGF-I. In the next experiment, both forms of ghrelin (1 ng/g body weight) significantly increased plasma IGF-I levels 10 h after the injection. No significant effect of either ghrelin was observed on plasma PRL levels. Both forms of GHS receptor (GHSR-1a and -1b) were found in the pituitary, clearly indicating that tilapia ghrelins stimulate primarily GH release through the GHS receptor. Stimulation of hepatic expression of IGF-I and GHR suggests metabolic roles of ghrelin in tilapia.  相似文献   

17.
Control of growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) release was investigated in hypophysial stalk-transected (HST) and stalk-intact pigs by determining the effects of analogs of GH-releasing factors (GHRF), somatostatin (SRIF), arginine, thyrotropin-releasing hormone, alpha-methyl-rho-tyrosine, and haloperidol. HST and control gilts were challenged with intravenous injections of human pancreatic GHRF(1-40)OH, thyrotropin-releasing hormone, and analogs of rat hypothalamic GHRF. HST animals remained acutely responsive to GHRF by releasing 2-fold greater quantities of GH than seen in controls. This occurred in spite of a 38% reduction in pituitary gland weight and a 32 and 55% decrease in GH concentration and total content. During SRIF infusion, GH remained at similar basal concentrations in HST and control gilts, but increased immediately after stopping SRIF infusion only in the controls. Releasable pituitary GH appears to accumulate during SRIF infusion. GHRF given during SRIF infusion caused a 2-fold greater release of GH than seen in animals receiving only GHRF. Arginine increased (P less than 0.05) GH release in controls, but not in HST gilts, which suggests that it acts through the central nervous system. Basal PRL concentrations were greater (P less than 0.05) in HST gilts than in control gilts. TRH acutely elevated circulating PRL (P less than 0.001) in HST gilts, suggesting that it acts directly on the pituitary gland. Haloperidol, a dopamine receptor antagonist, increased circulating PRL in controls but not in HST animals. alpha-Methyl-rho-tyrosine did not consistently increase circulating PRL, however, suggesting that it did not sufficiently alter turnover rate of the tyrosine hydroxylase pool. The results indicate that the isolated pituitary after HST remains acutely responsive to hypothalamic releasing and inhibiting factors for both GH and PRL release in the pig.  相似文献   

18.
The phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), a potent activator of Ca(2+)- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (C kinase), stimulates luteinizing hormone (LH) release from rat pituitary cells. The actions of TPA upon LH release were compared with those of the GnRH superagonist [D-Ala6] des-Gly10-GnRH N-ethylamide (GnRHa) in cultured pituitary cells. LH release was stimulated by 0.1 nM TPA and the maximum response at 10 nM TPA was 50% of the LH response to GnRHa. The ED50 values for TPA and GnRHa were 1.2 and 0.037 nM, respectively, and the maximum stimulatory effects of TPA and GnRHa on LH release were not additive. GnRHa-stimulated LH release was decreased by calmodulin (CaM) antagonists including pimozide, trifluoperazine, W5 and W7, being most effectively reduced (by 70%) by 10 microM pimozide. In contrast to their inhibition of GnRH action, these antagonists enhanced TPA-stimulated LH release, so that 10 microM pimozide and W7 doubled the maximum LH response. The potent GnRH antagonist [Ac-D-p-Cl-Phe1.2, D-Trp3, D-Lys6, D-Ala10]GnRH, which completely inhibited GnRHa-stimulated LH release with ID50 of 6.8 nM, also reduced maximum TPA-stimulated LH release by about 50%. These results suggest that both Ca2+/CaM and C kinase pathways are involved in the LH release mechanism, and indicate that C kinase plays a major role in the action of GnRH upon gonadotropin secretion. The synergism between CaM antagonists and TPA suggests that blockade of CaM-mediated processes leads to enhanced activation of the C kinase pathway, possibly by removal of an inhibitory influence. Furthermore, the partial inhibition of TPA-stimulated LH release by a GnRH antagonist suggests that the pathway(s), specifically connected with LH release in the diverse effects of C kinase, might be locked by the continuous receptor inactivation by antagonist and indicates the complicated pathways which diverge from the receptor and converge into specific cellular response.  相似文献   

19.
Proteinase inhibitors were tested for their ability to inhibit prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) release by cultured anterior pituitary cells of the rat. Inhibitors of microbial origin (chymostatin, elastatinal, leupeptin) had either no or a moderate effect on hormone release while some tripeptide aldehydes, especially those with lysine at their C terminus, inhibited markedly PRL and to a lesser extent GH release. Boc-DPhe-Phe-lysinal was the most effective on lactotrophs inhibiting PRL release more than 50% at 10(-4) M. The site(s) of action of tripeptide aldehydes remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

20.
Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) stimulates biphasic prolactin (PRL) secretion from rat pituitary GH3 cells. The pretreatment of cells with EGTA (100 microM) plus arachidonic acid (15 microM), a condition which decreased TRH-responsive intracellular Ca2+ pools, eliminated the activity of TRH on burst PRL secretion (2 min) but did not alter that on sustained PRL secretion (30 min). However, the treatment of cells with EGTA, arachidonic acid and H-7 (300 microM), a potent inhibitor of protein kinase C (PKC), almost completely suppressed the activity of TRH for sustained PRL secretion. In cells down-modulated for PKC, TRH abolished this Ca2(+)-independent sustained PRL secretion. These results suggest that TRH acts through a separate, Ca2(+)-independent secretory mechanism, besides by modulating the Ca2(+)-dependent mechanism and that PKC is involved in this Ca2(+)-independent secretory pathway.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号