Effects of Adrenalectomy and Hypercorticism on the ACTH Content of the Anterior and the Posterior Pituitary in Rats with Inherited Diabetes Insipidus (Brattleboro Strain)

Abstract
The effects of adrenalectomy (Adx) and hypercorticism on the ACTH content in the anterior (AH) and the neurointermediate lobe (NIL) of the pituitary in Long Evans (+/+), heterozygous (+/DI) and homozygous (DI/DI) Brattleboro rats were determined using dispersed adrenal cells bioassay. Adx decreased the NIL-ACTH content in +/DI and DI/DI rats and left it unchanged in the +/+ rats. Adx increased the AH-ACTH content in the three groups. Hypercorticism had a delayed decreasing effect both in the AH and in the NIL in all rats, with one exception for the NIL in DI/DI rats. Conversely to what appeared in Wistar rats, in Long Evans and Brattleboro rats the corticosterone administered in drinking water was unable to reduce the increase in AH-ACTH activity. These data suggest that Brattleboro, and, to a lesser extent, Long Evans rats from which the former are derived present some particularities in the regulation of their corticotropic function at the AH and the NIL level. We also observed that NaCl (0.9%) added to drinking water and hypercorticism are two factors able to increase diabetes insipidus in homozygous rats without modifying the water intake in Long Evans and heterozygous rats. 1 Dedicated to Professor F. Stutinsky