Abstract

The roles of calcium ions and voltage-sensitive calcium channels in gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-stimulated luteinizing hormone (LH) release were investigated in rat anterior pituitary cells. The calcium ionophores A23187 and ionomycin stimulated LH release from cultured pituitary cells, in which ionomycin (5 X 10(-5) M) was as effective as a maximal concentration of GnRH (10(-8) M). In addition, a concentration of the calcium channel agonist methyl 1,4-dihydro-2,6-dimethyl-3-nitro-4-(2-trifluoromethylphenyl)-pyridine- 5-carboxylate (BK 8644) (10(-8) M), which did not alter basal LH release, potentiated the ability of submaximal (10(-10) and 10(-9) M) doses of GnRH to increase LH secretion. Furthermore, concentrations of the calcium channel antagonist nitrendipine (10(-8)-10(-5) M) that did not alter basal LH release, inhibited GnRH-stimulated LH secretion by 30-40%. Nitrendipine (10(-8) M) also blocked the potentiation of GnRH-induced LH secretion by BK 8644. During column perifusion of pituitary cells, 10(-8) M nitrendipine reduced the LH response to a 2-min pulse of 10(-8) M GnRH by about 40%. In Quin-2-loaded pituitary cells, supramaximal doses (10(-6) M) of a potent GnRH agonist rapidly elevated cytoplasmic Ca2+ by 50-100 nM. Concomitant treatment with nitrendipine decreased the GnRH agonist-induced Ca2+ signal by 40-60%. These results indicate that increases in intracellular Ca2+ via voltage-sensitive calcium channels partially reproduce GnRH action, and also that GnRH causes activation of such channels. However, the increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration during GnRH action must originate in part from mobilization of internal Ca2+ stores, and its relatively small magnitude may be consistent with the concomitant activation of protein kinase C as an intermediate step in GnRH action.

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