Abstract
Cholera toxin (CTX; 5 micrograms/ml), but not pertussis toxin (100 ng/ml), when preincubated with pituitary cells for 18 h, enhances the percentage of cellular LH released in response to continuous or pulsatile administration of 5 x 10(-9) M GnRH. This effect occurs without increasing total (intracellular plus extracellular) LH, indicating that it is best explained by redistribution of LH from a nonreleasable to a releasable pool. This site of action is consistent with the observation that CTX-pretreated cells are also sensitized to stimulation of LH release by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. The observations that CTX stimulates the production of cAMP in these cells and that the sensitizing action of CTX is mimicked by (Bu)2cAMP (1 mM) are consistent with the view that a CTX-stimulated guanyl nucleotide binding protein, capable of activating adenylyl cyclase, is mediating this sensitization. We used a perifused cell system to show that the movement of LH into a releasable pool is lost with the onset of homologous desensitization due to high pulse frequency or constant administration of GnRH (5 x 10(-9) M, continuous or a pulse each 15 min). Sensitization to CTX is restored by stimulation with a high concentration of GnRH (10(-6) M) or by resetting the pulse frequency to the rate measured in vivo (a pulse each 90 min). Both of these treatments also circumvent the desensitized state, restoring LH release. These results identify a novel lesion associated with the development of desensitization in the gonadotrope and support the role of a CTX-sensitive guanyl nucleotide binding protein in regulation of pituitary responsiveness to GnRH.
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