Abstract
Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), a primary mediator of stress responses, produces changes in the gastrointestinal tract identical to those induced by stress. CRF is tenfold more potent in females than in males, but gonadectomy reverses this difference. We postulated that positive modulators of CRF, such as oxytocin (OT) and vasopressin (AVP), may act in females to potentiate effects of CRF and thus could account for the gender-related differences in colonic sensitivity to CRF and stress. Given with CRF, neither OT, peripheral AVP, nor central AVP increased colonic transit any more than CRF alone, suggesting that OT and AVP do not potentiate CRF's actions in the colon. These data indicate that endogenous OT and AVP do not directly affect colonic transit, and that OT and AVP do not account for the gender-related differences in the effects of stress and CRF on colonic transit.
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