Abstract

Circulating levels of corticosterone and prolactin were measured by radioimmunoassay at hourly intervals during a 24 h period to establish the diurnal rhythm of these hormones in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). Corticosterone levels exhibited a distinct circadian variation with concentrations reaching a zenith at 2000 h and a nadir at 1200 h in male and female SHR. Corticosterone levels in females were consistently greater than males. Circulating prolactin levels were greater during the light h than dark in the female; the opposite occurred in males. Measurement of pituitary prolactin content tended to be low when serum prolactin levels were high and vice versa. The circadian rhythm of circulating corticosterone and prolactin in the hypertensive SHR was found to be similar to the day-night patterns established for normotensive rats. However, these measurements were made under quiescent conditions. It is suggested that because SHR are hyper-responsive to stress and because corticosterone and prolactin have synchronous effects on stress-induced adrenal steroidogenesis, further investigation of prolactin and corticosterone may reveal a participatory role of these hormones in the pathogenesis of the genetically-programmed hypertension of SHR.

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