To determine whether increased vasopressinergic activity during chronic stress or adrenalectomy mediates trophic changes in the corticotroph, we examined the effect of peripheral V1 receptor blockade in rats, using the antagonist, dGly[Phaa1,D-tyr(et), Lys, Arg]vasopressin (VP), on the number of pituitary cells taking up bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and cells containing immunoreactive ACTH (irACTH). Adrenalectomy significantly increased the number of BrdU- and ACTH-labeled cells at 3 and 6 d, and a much larger increase was observed at 28 d. Minipump infusion of V1 antagonist for 28 d, at doses blocking the increases in ACTH and corticosterone induced by exogenous VP, prevented the increases in BrdU incorporation, but not irACTH cells observed 28 d after adrenalectomy. Unexpectedly, colocalization of BrdU with ACTH-positive cells was minor (about three cells per pituitary section), and this was unaffected by adrenalectomy or V1 antagonist infusion. In contrast, adrenalectomy for 6 or 14 d failed to increase BrdU incorporation or irACTH cells in V1b receptor knockout mice while inducing the expected increase in wild-type mice. The data show that VP is required for pituitary mitogenesis after adrenalectomy but, at least in rats, not for increasing the number of corticotrophs. The lack of colocalization of ACTH in mitotic cells suggests that recruitment of corticotrophs during adrenalectomy occurs from undifferentiated cells. Copyright © 2007 by The Endocrine Society.
CITATION STYLE
Subburaju, S., & Aguilera, G. (2007). Vasopressin mediates mitogenic responses to adrenalectomy in the rat anterior pituitary. Endocrinology, 148(7), 3102–3110. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2007-0103
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