Abstract

The roles of oxytocin and vasopressin on prolactin secretion were studied. Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats ovariectomized for two weeks and treated with a long-acting estrogen, polyestradiol phosphate for one week were used. Hormone administration and serial blood sampling were accomplished through indwelling intra-atrial catheters which were implanted two days before the experiment. Both oxytocin (20 μg/rat) and vasopressin (5 μg/rat) stimulated prolactin secretion within 10 min after injection and the effects were diminished by 30 min. In animals pretreated with a small dose of dopamine antagonist, sulpiride (1 μg/rat), the effect of TRH on prolactin secretion was repeatedly shown to be potentiated. Same pretreatments with two different time intervals (30 and 60 min) between sulpiride and oxytocin/vasopressin administration, however, had no effect on oxytocin- or vasopressin-stimulated prolactin secretion. A vasopressin analog, 1-deamino-[D-Arg 8]-vasopressin (dDAVP), with antidiuretic but no vasopressor activity was also used in the study. It was found that unlike vasopressin, dDAVP had no effect on prolactin secretion. In conclusion, both oxytocin and vasopressin can have a stimulatory effect on prolactin secretion when given in vivo . Unlike TRH, however, the action of oxytocin or vasopressin was not augmented by pretreatments of dopamine antagonist. The action of vasopressin on prolactin secretion may be a side effect of its vasopressor activity.

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