Abstract

ACTH concentration and the responsiveness of dispersed anterior pituitary cells to hypothalamic extract and to vasopressin were studied in homozygous (DI), heterozygous (HTZ), DI-pitressin treated (DIP) Brattleboro rats, and in control Long-Evans rats. Absolute, but not relative, anterior pituitary weights of HTZ, DI, and DIP animals were significantly smaller than those of controls. The concentration of immunoreactive (I) and bioreactive (B) ACTH in dispersed anterior pituitary cells was greater in DI and DIP than in HTZ or in control animals, although the total amount of ACTH was greater in control than DI or HTZ animals. Media from incubates of pituitary cells derived from DI and DIP animals contained less I and B ACTH than those from HTZ or control animals. Pituitary cells derived from DI animals secreted markedly less ACTH following incubation with hypothalamic extract (NIH-HE-RP-1) than did cells from HTZ animals. The response in DIP animals was intermediate between that of DI and HTZ animals. In contrast, pituitary cells derived from DI and DIP animals were significantly more responsive to vasopressin than those from control or HTZ animals.

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