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  • Title: Ascorbic acid potentiates the inhibitory effect of dopamine on prolactin release: a putative supplementary agent for PIF.
    Author: Shin SH, Stirling RG, Hanna S, Lim M, Wilson JX.
    Journal: Endocrinol Exp; 1990 Mar; 24(1-2):151-8. PubMed ID: 1972918.
    Abstract:
    Dopamine has a catechol group which can be easily oxidized by mild oxidizing agents. Ascorbic acid has been routinely added to a dopamine solution in order to protect it from oxidation. We have examined the effect of ascorbic acid on dopaminergic inhibition of prolactin release. Male rat pituitary cells were dispersed using trypsin and cultured for 5-7 days before experiments. Ascorbic acid did not stimulate nor inhibit prolactin release in both static monolayer culture and dynamic perifusion systems, but potentiated by approximately 100 times the inhibitory effect of dopamine on prolactin release. In order to differentiate chemical protection from potentiation, we tested the potentiation effect of isoascorbic acid which is an epimer of biologically active L-ascorbic acid but is biologically less active. Our results indicated that isoascorbic acid caused less potentiation of the dopaminergic effect on prolactin release than did ascorbic acid. In a perifusion system, a high concentration of dopamine (100 nmol/l) was unable to inhibit prolactin release for a 1 h experimental period, but a low concentration of dopamine (10 nmol/l) plus ascorbic acid (10 mumol/l) inhibited prolactin release for the entire 1 h perifusion period. There is a strong possibility that ascorbic acid may be a physiological supplementary agent for the prolactin-release inhibiting factor (PIF) since the blood concentration of ascorbic acid is rather high (23-85 mumol/l).
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