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  • Title: In vitro regulation of pituitary ACTH secretion in inflammatory disease susceptible Lewis (LEW/N) and inflammatory disease resistant Fischer (F344/N) rats.
    Author: Zelazowski P, Smith MA, Gold PW, Chrousos GP, Wilder RL, Sternberg EM.
    Journal: Neuroendocrinology; 1992 Oct; 56(4):474-82. PubMed ID: 1335552.
    Abstract:
    We have previously shown that susceptibility to inflammatory disease in Lewis (LEW/N) rats is related to their limited hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis responses to a variety of inflammatory stimuli, while the relative resistance to inflammatory disease in Fischer (F344/N) rats is related to their potent HPA axis responses to these same stimuli. In vivo studies also showed that LEW/N pituitary ACTH responses to exogenous corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) were blunted compared to F344/N. To determine if there is a fundamental difference in pituitary corticotroph function between the two strains, independent of other factors influencing the HPA axis, we compared ACTH responses to a variety of stimuli in LEW/N and F344/N primary pituitary cell cultures. Here we show that in vitro basal ACTH secretion and peak ACTH response to CRH, forskolin and 8-bromo-cAMP are 50% lower in LEW/N than F344/N rats. However, these findings can be explained by other observations: diminished basal ACTH content, POMC mRNA, and a decreased number of corticotrophs, in pituitary cell cultures from LEW/N compared to F344/N rats. In addition, LEW/N corticotrophs were more sensitive to dexamethasone and to corticosterone suppression of CRH-stimulated ACTH secretion compared to F344/N. The data support the possibility of an HPA axis defect in LEW/N rats at the pituitary level which could be secondary to prolonged understimulation by hypothalamic CRH, or could also be partially related to enhanced glucocorticoid feedback inhibition.
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