The role of endogenous atrial natriuretic peptide in resting and stress-induced release of corticotropin, prolactin, growth hormone, and thyroid-stimulating hormone.
- 1 December 1992
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 89 (23) , 11391-11395
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.89.23.11391
Abstract
Our previous studies have shown that stimulation of the anteroventral third ventricle region increases atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) release, whereas lesions of the anteroventral third ventricle or median eminence block the release of ANP from blood volume expansion, suggesting a critical central nervous system participation in this response. ANP is also produced within neurons that have cell bodies in the rostral hypothalamus and axons that extend to the median eminence and neural lobe. In addition to its natriuretic effect, the peptide can inhibit the release of corticotropin (ACTH) and prolactin, anterior pituitary hormones that are released during stress. To determine the physiologic significance of ANP in the control of basal and stress-induced release of anterior pituitary hormones, highly specific antiserum against the peptide (AB-ANP) was microinjected into the third cerebral ventricle of conscious freely moving male rats to immunoneutralize hypothalamic ANP. In the initial experiment, the antiserum or control normal rabbit serum (NRS) was injected into the third cerebral ventricle to determine the effect of the antiserum on basal release of pituitary hormones. The antiserum had no effect on the concentrations of plasma ACTH, prolactin, or thyroid-stimulating hormone for 3 hr after the injection; however, plasma growth hormone concentration, although unchanged for 2 hr, was markedly elevated at 3 hr. These results indicate that although ANP appears to have no effect on the basal release of the other hormones, it has a physiologically significant inhibitory effect on growth hormone release. The delay of the effect is probably related to the time required for the antiserum to diffuse to the site of action of the peptide, presumably at some distance from the ventricle. Since this effect was demonstrable only after 3 hr, in the stress experiment, the antiserum or NRS was microinjected into the third ventricle 3 hr prior to application of ether stress. The rapid elevation of plasma ACTH in NRS-injected rats was markedly augmented by AB-ANP. Ether also induced a rapid increase in plasma prolactin in the NRS-injected animals, as expected. Contrary to the ACTH response, the maximal increase in plasma prolactin after ether was attenuated in animals preinjected with AB-ANP. In the NRS-injected animals, there was a significant decline in plasma growth hormone after the application of ether that was significantly accentuated by AB-ANP, but this was probably the result of the higher initial levels of plasma growth hormone in the ANP-AB group followed by its disappearance with a half-time similar to that of the NRS-injected group. The decline in plasma thyroid-stimulating hormone after ether stress was unaltered in the animals injected with AB-ANP. The results of these immunoneutralization studies suggest that endogenous ANP does not play a role in thyroid-stimulating hormone release. On the other hand, the endogenous peptide appears to have a physiologically significant inhibitory role in suppressing ACTH release during stress, mediated at least partly by suppression of vasopressin release. Endogenous ANP has a pathophysiologic role in augmenting the prolactin release in stress either by inhibiting release of prolactin-inhibiting factors or, alternatively, by enhancing release of prolactin-releasing factors. Endogenous ANP appears to inhibit resting, without altering stress-induced inhibition of growth hormone release by stimulating somatostatin release and/or inhibiting growth hormone-releasing hormone release or by both actions.Keywords
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