Abstract
To evaluate a possible physiological role of endogenous substance P (SP) in the control of growth hormone (GH; somatotropin) secretion, a specific antiserum against SP (anti-SP) was injected intraventricularly (3 microliters into the third cerebral ventricle) in unanesthetized unrestrained normal male rats. Control rats received an equivalent volume of normal rabbit serum (NRS). Intraventricular injection of the NRS lowered plasma GH concentrations significantly. The lowering was detected on first measurement at 10 min after injection and was maximal at 30 min. This was followed by a return toward the initial levels. Third ventricular injection of antiserum significantly increased plasma GH in comparison with control animals injected with NRS. The effect was observed within 10-20 min, and levels remained elevated for the 120-min duration of the experiment. To confirm the possible inhibitory role of endogenous SP on GH release, 3 microliters of 0.9% NaCl (saline) alone or saline containing a specific antagonist of SP, [D-Pro2,D-Trp7,9]SP, was injected into the third ventricle of normal male rats. The antagonist also increased plasma GH significantly (P less than 0.005) within 5 min compared with values in the saline-injected control group. Levels remained elevated for 30 min but had returned toward control values 60 min after injection. In contrast, synthetic SP significantly decreased plasma GH when injected intravenously or intraventricularly compared with plasma GH in the control saline-injected group. To investigate a possible direct action of SP on GH release from the anterior pituitary gland, we incubated synthetic SP with dispersed anterior pituitary cells for 1 hr. The release of GH from incubated anterior pituitary cells was not affected at any dose of SP (10(-9) to 10(-6) M) tested. These data strongly indicate that endogenous SP has a physiological inhibitory role in the control of GH secretion at the level of the hypothalamus in the male rat.
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Selected References
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