Abstract

The overnight 8-mg dexamethasone suppression test is often used to differentiate Cushing's disease, due to an oversecretion of ACTH from the pituitary gland, from other kinds of Cushing's syndrome. However, a few patients with ACTH-producing pituitary adenoma show no suppression of plasma cortisol after the administration of 8 mg of dexamethasone. To clarify the relationship between the level of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) in the pituitary adenoma and the sensitivity to dexamethasone in Cushing's disease, we thus examined the levels of GR alpha and GR beta mRNAs in the pituitary adenomas in six patients who were proven at surgery to have pituitary ACTH-producing adenomas. Total RNA was extracted from six pituitary adenomas and pituitary tissue adjacent to one of the adenomas, and the mRNA levels of GR alpha, GR beta, pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) and beta-actin in these samples were sampled by quantitative RT-PCR. The GR alpha mRNA levels in the adenomas from the two patients who showed no response to the 8-mg dexamethasone suppression test were significantly lower than those in the adenomas of four patients who showed suppression. The GR beta mRNA level was much lower than that of GR alpha mRNA but not significantly different among the six adenomas. These results suggest strongly that decreased expression of GR alpha in pituitary adenomas may be the major reason for the marked insensitivity to the 8-mg dexamethasone suppression test observed in two patients with Cushing's disease.

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