Feedback regulation by progesterone of stress-induced prolactin release in rats

Autor: E. Leguizamon, Ricardo P. Deis, G. A. Jahn
Rok vydání: 1989
Předmět:
Zdroj: The Journal of endocrinology. 120(1)
ISSN: 0022-0795
Popis: We have previously found that modifications to serum progesterone concentration have profound inhibitory effects on prolactin release in response to ether stress. The objective of the present study was to determine the effect of ether stress on progesterone secretion and the role of this steroid in ether-induced prolactin release. Serum progesterone concentration, 5 min after ether stress had been applied over a 2-min period, was consistently increased in male rats, in cyclic rats on the mornings of pro-oestrus and oestrus, and in androgenized rats in permanent oestrus. Ovariectomized androgenized rats showed the same response. Adrenalectomy of male and female rats abolished the progesterone increase induced by stress. Thus, the progesterone secreted by stressed rats is mostly of adrenal origin. In groups of male and pro-oestrous rats, circulating concentrations of prolactin and progesterone were measured from 5 to 60 min after stress. In both sexes the serum prolactin concentration was significantly increased at only 5 and 10 min after stress when compared with control values. In pro-oestrous rats the serum progesterone concentration was significantly higher than in controls at 5, 10 and 20 min after stress, whilst in male rats the concentration remained significantly higher at 30 min. Thirty minutes after the first stress, male and pro-oestrous rats were etherized for 2 min, and bled 5 min after removal from the ether container. In female rats this second stress produced only a slight but significant increase in serum prolactin concentrations, whereas in male rats prolactin concentrations did not increase. The second stress was still capable of significantly increasing circulating progesterone concentrations to levels similar to those obtained after the first stress in animals from all groups. Thus, an increased circulating progesterone concentration did not lead to regulation of further progesterone secretion. To find whether this type of response was due to a blocking effect of the previously released progesterone, animals were injected with the anti-progesterone RU 38486 (17β-hydroxy-11β-(4-dimethylaminophenyl)-17α-propinyl-oestra-4,9-dien-3-one) or with a specific antibody raised against progesterone. In both groups of treated rats the second stress induced a significant increase in serum prolactin and progesterone concentrations to give values similar to those obtained after the first stress. When the second stress was applied to female rats 60 min after the first the prolactin response was comparable to that obtained after the first exposure to ether. In conclusion, we have demonstrated that serum prolactin and progesterone concentrations are significantly increased after ether stress, and that the latter hormone exerts an inhibitory regulatory feedback on prolactin secretion. These results provide an important new insight into the role of progesterone in the regulation of prolactin release. Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 120, 37–43
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