Effect of Stress, Adrenalectomy, Hypophysectomy and Hydrocortisone on the Corticotropin-Releasing Activity of Rat Median Eminence
- 1 January 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Endocrine Society in Endocrinology
- Vol. 76 (1), 122-126
- https://doi.org/10.1210/endo-76-1-122
Abstract
Changes in the corticotropinreleasing activity of the median eminence of rats are described following acute stress, adrenalectomy, hypophysectomy or cortisol treatment. The CRF content of the median eminence began increasing 5 days after adrenalectomy until it attained a concentration 2–2½ times that of normal animals 20 days after the removal of the adrenals. This level was subsequently maintained for at least another 30 days. The CRF content of the median eminence of rats 48 hr after hypophysectomy did not differ from normal controls. There was a rapid and marked increase in the corticotropin- releasing activity of the median eminence 1.25 min after stress in normal, adrenalectomized and hypophysectomized animals. A dose of hydrocortisone that blocks stress-induced ACTH release drastically reduced the corticotropin-releasing activity of median eminence and completely prevented the rise in CRF content of that tissue caused by stress. It is suggested that the close parallelism between the changes occurring in the median eminence and pituitary under these conditions indicates that CRF may regulate pituitary ACTH synthesis. (Endocrinology76: 122, 1965)Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- ACTH-Releasing Hypothalamic Neurohumor in Peripheral Blood1Endocrinology, 1962