Presence of corticotropin in brain of normal and hypophysectomized rats.

Abstract
Immunoreactive and bioreactive corticotropin (ACTH-like) activities were detected in the median eminence and remaining medial basal hypothalamus of both normal and hypophysectomized adult male rats: bioreactive ACTH (pg/100 .mu.g of protein) 1028 in median eminence and 1289 in medial basal hypothalamus; immunoreactive ACTH (midportion ACTH antibody), 1554 in median eminence and 1887 in medial basal hypothalamus. By use of appropriate antibodies and bioassay, it was demonstrated that immunoreactivity was not due solely to .alpha.-melanotropin, previously reported to be present in the brain of hypophysectomized animals. The Sephadex G-50 gel filtration patterns determined by immunoassay of column eluates obtained from hypothalamic extracts of normal or hypophysectomized animals were similar but were not identical to the pattern derived from whole pituitary. Immunoreactive (midportion ACTH antibody) ACTH concentrations (pg/100 .mu.g of protein) of other CNS areas in normal animals were: cerebellum 34.3, cortex 46.3, thalamus 23.8 and hippocampus 116.3. The total amount of bioreactive ACTH present in the median eminence and medial basal hypothalamus is approximately 1% of that present in the pituitary. Such ACTH may have a diencephalic rather than pituitary origin. The question of the functional significance of such ACTH is raised.