Effects of thyroidectomy, propylthiouracil, and thyroxine on pituitary content and immunocytochemical staining of thyrotropin (TSH) and thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH).

Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated immunocytochemical staining for beta chains of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH-beta) in rough endoplasmic reticulum of pituitary cells hypertrophied after thyroidectomy ("thyroidectomy cells") (Moriarty CG(1976): J Histochem Cytochem (24:846; Moriarty GC, Tobin RB (1976): J Histochem Cytochem 24:1140). Here we report the localization of thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) in serial sections of the same pituitaries to determine if it could be found at similar sites. No staining for TRH was found in hypertrophied TSH cells formed 42 days after the surgery, or after 14, 34, and 70 days of propylthiouracil (PTU) treatment. The loss in immunostaining in the PTU-treated rats was correlated with radioimmunoassay (RIA) measurements that showed a 65% reduction in anterior pituitary TRH content after 34, 70, and 98 days of PTU treatment (from 22.9--7.8 pg/mg wet wt) and a 50% reduction in TSH content after 34 days of treatment. When thyroxine was administered to hypothyroid rats for 3 days before death, our previous studies had demonstrated intense staining for TSH in granules inside the rough endoplasmic reticulum. In this study, the radioimmunoassay showed that TSH content rose dramatically in the hypothyroid animals treated with PTU for 77 days and thyroxine for 2 days before death (from 8.5--64.1 mU/mg wet wt); however, the rise in TRH content was minimal (5.8--9.8 pg/mg wet wt). The immunocytochemical stain for TRH correlated well with the RIA showing a weak reaction mainly on small granules in the cytoplasm. No reaction for TRH was found in rough endoplasmic reticulum. These results suggest that TRH and TSH storage sites are dissimilar in the hypothyroid rat. The presence of stain for TRH in granules in the cytoplasm suggests that it might play a role in the storage or packaging of TSH. Its absence in profiles of rough endoplasmic reticulum staining intensely for TSH suggests that it is not synthesized at this site. No definite conclusions about its origin can be drawn at this time.