Abstract

Intravenous angiotensin II and ether stress were found to produce a rapid, transient increase in the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) content of the median eminence as measured by a radioimmunoassay employing an antibody against rat CRH(1-41). This confirms previous reports of transient increases in CRH measured by bioassay. The increase did not occur in the paraventricular region or in other parts of the brain. It occurred along with an increase in plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) when a second ether stress was administered 1 h after the first, and it also occurred when rats that had been adrenalectomized for 5 days were exposed to ether. The increases in CHR and the ACTH responses to ether were reduced or abolished by dexamethasone and pentobarbital. Four days after semicircular knife cuts in the posterior hypothalamus, resting CRH in the median eminence was increased but there was no further rise after ether stress. Plasma ACTH was normal at rest after the cuts, but the increase produced by ether was reduced. The ACTH responses to angiotensin II and immobilization were also reduced. Because the posterior knife cuts reduced hypothalamic catecholamine content, the effects of reducing hypothalamic norepinephrine and epinephrine by administration of the dopamine-beta-hydroxylase inhibitor diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC) were tested. Five hours after DDC, plasma ACTH was elevated but there was no further increase with ether stress. The median eminence CRH content was normal but failed to increase after exposure to ether.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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