Abstract

Gastric lesions are known to be caused by stress. Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) is a key peptide initiating various stress response. This study was designed to investigate how brain CRF is involved in the occurence of stress-induced gastric erosion in rats. Intracerebroventricular (icv) administration of CRF suppressed the occurrence of gastric erosion induced by water-immersion restraint stress, and its suppressive effect was blocked by coadministration of a CRF receptor antagonist in rats. The peripheral administration of CRF had no influence on the occurrence of erosion. The icv administration of a CRF receptor antagonist or anti-rat CRF γ-globulin increased gastric erosion induced by the stress. Ganglionic blockade with chlorisondamine, muscarinic blockade with atropine, or bilateral adrenalectomy by itself significantly inhibited the occurrence of stress-induced gastric erosion, and no additional effect of CRF on these treatments-induced inhibition of erosion was found. These results, therefore, suggest that the occurrence of stress-induced gastric erosion is mediated by the autonomic nervous system- and adrenal-dependent pathway, and that brain CRF reduces the occurrence of stress-induced gastric lesions by acting on its specific receptor within the central nervous system, probably through the autonomic nervous system- and adrenal-dependent mechanism.

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