Abstract
Complete processing of the TRH precursor in the rat hypothalamus generates TRH and a number of other "cryptic' peptides that flank the TRH progenitor sequences. Two of these peptides, P4 (Ser-Phe-Pro-Trp-Met-Glu-Ser-Asp-Val-Thr; present between amino acids 160 and 169 of rat prepro-TRH) and P5 (Phe-Ile-Asp-Pro-Gly-Leu-Gln-Arg-Ser-Trp- Glu-Glu-Lys-Glu-Gly-Glu-Gly-Val-Leu-Met-Pro-Glu; present between amino acids 178 and 199 of rat prepro-TRH), have recently been shown to modulate TRH-induced GH and thyrotrophin release from rat pituitary glands. The possibility that these peptides might modulate GH secretion in chickens was examined, since TRH is a physiological GH-releasing factor in birds. The administration of P4 and P5 (at doses of 10 and 100 micrograms/kg) consistently lowered basal plasma GH concentrations 30 and 60 min after a bolus i.v. injection. Pretreatment with P4 and P5 similarly suppressed the GH response to systemic TRH challenge. The GH-releasing activity of maximally stimulatory doses of TRH was also reduced by concomitant injections of either P4 (100 micrograms/kg) or P5 (100 micrograms/kg), which blocked the GH-releasing activity of submaximally effective doses of TRH. In marked contrast, neither P4 nor P5 significantly affected basal or TRH-induced GH release from chicken pituitary glands incubated in vitro. These results demonstrate novel actions of P4 and P5 on hypothalamic-pituitary function and, for the first time, indicate extrapituitary sites of action for these cryptic peptides in modulating anterior pituitary function.
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