Abstract

The role of central glucagon in regulating GH secretion was studied in conscious male rats with chronic indwelling intra-atrial and intracerebro-ventricular (ICV) cannulae. Repeated blood sampling every 20 min from 1000 hr to 1700 hr showed two major GH bursts occurring at regular intervals ( 3.6±0.1 hr ) around 1200 hr and 1540 hr. The ICV (lateral ventricle) injection of glucagon (10 μg/rat) at 1100 hr inhibited spontaneous GH secretion, and the mean (±SE) plasma GH levels from 1120 hr to 1700 hr were lower than those in controls injected ICV with the vehicle solution only ( 31.9±7.8 ng/ml vs. 157.1±13.4 ng/ml , p<0.01). The GH bursts did not appear until 5 hr after the injection. The intravenous (IV) injection of glucagon (10 μg/rat) did not change plasma GH levels or the occurrence of spontaneous GH bursts. The glucagon-induced suppression of GH release was attenuated when anti-somatostatin serum (ASS), but not normal rabbit serum (NRS), was given IV in a volume of 0.25 ml immediately before the ICV injection of glucagon (10 μg/rat) (mean GH levels at 1120–1700 hr: ASS+glucagon, 133.6±26.7 ng/ml vs. NRS+glucagon, 30.5±7.4 ng/ml , p<0.01). These findings suggest that central glucagon may play an inhibitory role in regulating GH secretion by stimulating SRIF release from the hypothalamus in the rat.

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