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Title: Somatostatin inhibits prolactin secretion by multiple mechanisms involving a site of action distal to increased cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate and elevated cytosolic Ca2+ in rat lactotrophs. Author: Bjøro T, Ostberg BC, Sand O, Torjesen PA, Penman E, Gordeladze JO, Iversen JG, Gautvik KM, Haug E. Journal: Acta Physiol Scand; 1988 Jul; 133(3):271-82. PubMed ID: 2906508. Abstract: The release of prolactin (PRL) from a clonal cell-line of anterior pituitary cells (GH4C1) was inhibited by somatostatin (SRIH) in a dose-dependent manner (ED50 nM). The inhibition (20% of control levels) was detectable within 50 s and maximal within 90 s. Thyroliberin (TRH) enhancement of PRL secretion was biphasic. SRIH inhibited both phases equally. Ionomycin in combination with the phorbol ester, TPA, mimics the TRH-elicited PRL release, and SRIH partly inhibited this effect. SRIH had no effect on TRH-stimulated formation of inositol trisphosphate, and only small effects on TRH-activated adenylate cyclase. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and forskolin stimulated cAMP formation and PRL release potently. SRIH inhibited both effects of VIP and forskolin, and there was a close correlation between the inhibition of PRL secretion and cAMP accumulation. 8-Bromo-cAMP enhanced PRL release, an effect that was also partly reduced by SRIH. The Ca2+ channel activator, BAY-K-8644 and high extracellular K+ increased PRL release, and SRIH caused a partial reduction in the release response to both secretagogues. SRIH lowered [Ca2+]i, and markedly reduced the rise in [Ca2+]i elicited by TRH, VIP and K+. SRIH did not influence the Ca2+ spikes recorded in Na+-free solution, and had no effect on the TRH-induced membrane potential changes. Our results demonstrate that SRIH may inhibit PRL release from GH4C1 cells by (1) inhibiting hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase, (2) blocking the effect of cAMP and (3) lowering [Ca2+]i. None of these effects is, however, sufficient to explain all the effects of SRIH, suggesting that SRIH also exerts a major action at a step subsequent to cAMP accumulation and [Ca2+]i elevation. Since the GH4C1 cells possess one single class of binding sites, this implies that the same SRIH receptor is coupled to several cellular signalling systems.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]