Abstract
Mammalian liver is an estrogen-responsive tissue mediated by hepatic estrogen receptors. Although Ueyama et al. (Endocrinology 143:3162-3170, 2002) have reported the presence of aromatase and active production of gastric 17β-estradiol in parietal cells, there are a few studies on gastric 17β-estradiol exploring the relationship between gastro-hepato function and the gastro-pituitary-gonadal axis. The alteration of gastric 17β-estradiol flow into the systemic circulation by portal vein ligation (PVL) or partial hepatectomy (PH), and the effect of gastric 17β-estradiol on the pituitary function was investigated. In the PVL rats, arterial 17β-estradiol increased 9.5 times that of controls on day 3, and gradually decreased near to control levels in the portal vein by 4 weeks, which was still 5 times higher than those in the arteries of the control rats. In the PH rats, arterial 17β-estradiol increased 2 times that of controls on day 3, and gradually decreased to the control levels. Regeneration and growth of the liver remnants were observed about 2 weeks after PH. In the PVL and PH animals, pituitary ERα and prolactin mRNAs levels increased, positively correlating with an increase of arterial 17β-estradiol levels. Both reduced LHβ mRNA. It is apparent that hepatic dysfunction causes changes in gastric 17β-estradiol levels in the systemic circulation; and that elevated gastric 17β-estradiol affects pituitary function(s). This data suggest that gastric 17β-estradiol has a pivotal role in the regulation of the gastro-hepato-pituitary axis.
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