Bovine ′Neurophysin II’ Stimulates Growth Hormone Release in the Estradiol-Primed Male Rat

Abstract
Basal plasma concentrations of growth hormone (GH) were monitored in both normal and estradiol-primed male rats by the collection of sequential blood samples from freely moving rats, via chronic intraatrial cannulae. Blood was sampled every 2 min for a period of 80 min and plasma GH levels determined by radioimmunoassay. The normal male rats displayed a pulsatile release of GH, while the estradiol-primed male rats exhibited a relatively steady level of plasma GH concentration. The rats exposed to high levels of estradiol (1.59 ± 0.42 nmol/l plasma) also had a higher mean value of basal GH concentration. An injection of 100 µg/kg of bovine neurophysin II did not alter GH release in the normal male rats. However, it did significantly elevate GH levels in the estradiol-primed animals to a mean peak level approximately six times the mean basal level. The administration of 100 µg/kg of bovine neurophysin I to estradiol-primed male rats did not produce any change in plasma GH levels and thus eliminates the possibility of the nonspecific stimulation of neurophysin II on GH release.