Dopamine‐β‐Hydroxylase Activity is Necessary for Hypothalamo‐Pituitary‐Adrenal (HPA) Responses to Ether, and Stress‐Induced Facilitation of Subsequent HPA Responses to Acute Ether Emerges as HPA Responses are Inhibited by Increasing Corticosterone (B)
To determine a role of norepinephrine (NE) in stress-induced HPA function, young male rats were treated with diethyldithiocarbamide (DDC) which inhibits dopamine-beta-hydroxylase, the enzyme that synthesizes NE from dopamine (DA). DDC injected 5 h prior to ether stress stimulated ACTH and corticosterone (B) during this time, and there was no further HPA response to ether. To control for elevated B feedback in DDC effects on HPA responses to ether, rats were adrenalectomized (Adx) and replaced with no (0% B), moderate (40% B) and high (80% B) levels of steroid 5 d prior to DDC or saline with ether stress 5 h later; Sham-Adx rats were included. In Adx rats increasing B inhibited thymus weight, median eminence CRF content, pituitary and plasma ACTH. In saline-treated rats, ether 5 h later caused increased CRF content and plasma ACTH in Sham-Adx and Adx, 0% B, increased ACTH in Adx, 40% B, and no response in Adx, 80% B. B treatment did not alter catecholamine content, and DDC treatment reduced NE content in the paraventricular nuclei by 50-60% in all groups. 5 h after DDC, pituitary ACTH was decreased in all rats with B and plasma ACTH was increased in sham-Adx and Adx, 40% B; thus DDC caused significant, prolonged stress which should facilitate subsequent HPA responses to acute stress. There was no HPA response to ether in Sham-Adx, Adx, 0% or 40% B groups, but there was a marked ACTH response to ether in the Adx, 80% B group treated with DDC. We conclude that: 1) the HPA response to ether stress is probably mediated by catecholamines; 2) DDC does not stimulate responses in the HPA axis in the absence of B; and, 3) facilitation of HPA responses to acute stress depends on increased steady-state B signals. Facilitated responses are probably not mediated by catecholamines. The consequence of facilitation is that under conditions of chronic stress and elevated B concentrations, as in depression or anorexia nervosa in man, or adjuvent-induced arthritis in rats, the HPA axis is continually responsive to new stimuli.