Mechanism of restoration of ACTH release in rats with long-term lesions of the paraventricular nuclei

Abstract
The effects of lesions in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) on the adrenocortical response to ether stress were investigated in neurohypophysectomized and intact rats. During the first 4 days after placement of lesions in the PVN, the corticosterone response to ether stress was almost completely inhibited. It then gradually increased and, within 4–6 weeks of surgery, was restored to about 60% of that in sham-operated rats. Basal plasma concentrations of corticosterone were low in rats after placement of lesions in the PVN and/or after neurointermediate lobectomy (NILX). Corticosterone responses to ether stress were similar in groups submitted to PVN lesions and/or NILX, and lower than those in the appropriate sham-operated groups. In all lesioned groups, plasma ACTH concentrations after a combination of stressors (ether plus laparotomy) were also lower than those in the sham-operated groups. Six weeks after lesioning of the PVN, immunoreactive rat corticotrophin-releasing factor-41 (rCRF-41) concentrations in stalk-median eminence (SME) extract fell to about 5% of that in sham-operated rats, while immunoreactive arginine vasopressin (AVP) concentrations did not change. Immunohistochemistry revealed a substantial decrease in rCRF-41 immunostaining of the median eminence 6 weeks after lesioning of the PVN, though randomly located clusters of stained terminals were still seen in the whole rostro-caudal extent of the median eminence. A mixture containing synthetic rCRF-41 and AVP, in proportions similar to those in SME extracts from sham-operated rats, caused significantly less release of ACTH from anterior pituitary cell cultures than did SME extracts from sham-operated rats. Extracts of SME from PVN-lesioned rats released as much ACTH as a mixture containing synthetic rCRF-41 and AVP in proportions similar to those in the SME extracts from PVN-lesioned rats. Extracts of SME from either PVN-lesioned or sham-operated rats did not cause a significant increase in the amount of ACTH released when preincubated with antisera to both rCRF-41 and AVP. It is suggested that (1) the restoration of the adrenocortical reponse to ether stress, evident within a few days of placement of lesions in the PVN, occurs independently of neurohypophysial function; (2) the full corticosterone and ACTH response to ether or ether plus laparotomy stress requires not only an intact PVN but also an intact neurointermediate lobe; (3) SME extracts from sham-operated rats contain a factor(s) with the ability to potentiate the ACTHreleasing effect of rCRF-41 and AVP; and (4) the ACTH-releasing activity of SME extract obtained from rats with long-term PVN lesions is probably due to its remaininJ content of rCRF-41 and AVP. J. Endocr. (1986) 111, 75–82

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