Stimulation of Growth Hormone Release by Vasoactive Intestinal Polypeptide from Human Pituitary Adenomas in Vitro*

Abstract
The effects of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), TRH, dopamine, and rat median eminence extract on GH release from GH-secreting pituitary adenomas were studied in vitro using a sensitive superfusion method. Dispersed pituitary tumor cells obtained from three patients with acromegaly were placed in a superfusion column, and the amounts of GH in the superfusate were determined. The addition of VIP (10−6 M) to the perfusion system resulted in a marked increase in GH release in all three cases, and a dose-response relationship in VIP (10−8–10−6 M)-induced GH secretion was observed in one case studied. TRH (10−7 M) and median eminence extract (1 equivalent/ml) also caused an abrupt and marked increase in GH release in all of the experiments. The infusion of either dopamine (10−7 M) or bromocriptine (10−7 M) inhibited GH secretion. These results suggest that VIP as well as TRH stimulate GH secretion by a direct action on GH-secreting pituitary tumor cells in at least some acromegalic patients.

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