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Title: Neuropeptide-Y enhances luteinizing hormone (LH)-releasing hormone-induced LH release and elevations in cytosolic Ca2+ in rat anterior pituitary cells: evidence for involvement of extracellular Ca2+ influx through voltage-sensitive channels. Author: Crowley WR, Shah GV, Carroll BL, Kennedy D, Dockter ME, Kalra SP. Journal: Endocrinology; 1990 Sep; 127(3):1487-94. PubMed ID: 1696888. Abstract: The present studies were designed to investigate the mechanism by which neuropeptide-Y (NPY) augments the effect of LHRH to stimulate the release of LH from cultured rat anterior pituitary cells. Anterior pituitary cells from ovariectomized rats were enzymatically dispersed, cultured for 3 days, and then exposed to various secretagogues during 3-h incubations. As reported by this laboratory previously, NPY alone (100 nM) did not affect LH release, but significantly enhanced the LH response to 1 nM LHRH. This facilitatory action of NPY was mimicked by the dihydropyridine Ca2+ channel agonist Bay K 8644 (1 microM), and the enhancement of LHRH-induced LH release by either NPY or Bay K 8644 was prevented by the dihydropyridine antagonist nitrendipine (1 microM). Nitrendipine alone reduced the response to LHRH by approximately 25%, but did not affect basal LH release. In contrast, NPY failed to amplify the release of PRL in response to TRH, another Ca2(+)-mobilizing hormone. To test whether NPY also enhances the increase in cytosolic Ca2+ induced by LHRH, anterior pituitary cells were acutely dispersed into single cell suspensions, loaded with the fluorescent Ca2+ probe Indo-1 AM, and analyzed with a UV laser in an EPICS-753 flow cytometer at a rate of 500 cells/sec for 200 sec. The ratio of intracellular fluorescence resulting from Ca2+ bound to the Indo-1 to the fluorescence from Indo-1 alone (Indo-1 ratio), which is an index of the concentration of free cytosolic Ca2+, was determined for each cell. Approximately 7% of anterior pituitary cells responded to LHRH (1 or 10 nM) with significant increases in Indo-1 ratios, indicative of an increase in the concentration of free cytosolic Ca2+. EGTA (2.5 mM) reduced the basal Indo-1 ratios and attenuated, but did not abolish, the initial increase in response to LHRH, consistent with the initial extracellular Ca2+ influx-independent phase of the response to LHRH. NPY alone (100 nM) did not affect the Indo-1 ratios in anterior pituitary cells, but pretreatment with the peptide for 10 min before the scans significantly augmented the Indo-1 ratio response to 10 nM LHRH. This effect of NPY was also blocked by EGTA. Taken together, these biochemical and pharmacological studies suggest that NPY enhances the release of LH stimulated by LHRH by increasing extracellular Ca2+ entry, possibly by selectively affecting that component of the response involving dihydropyridine-sensitive L-type voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels during the initial stages of the cellular response to LHRH.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]