Abstract

Bromocriptine therapy normalizes PRL secretion in most, but not all, patients with prolactinomas. This study was undertaken to determine the mechanism(s) responsible for bromocriptine resistance in patients with a PRL-secreting macroadenomas (n = 5) or microadenomas (n = 3). Their mean basal plasma PRL value was 807 +/- 220 (+/- SE) micrograms/L before treatment, and their nadir mean value was 354 +/- 129 micrograms/L during chronic therapy with 15-30 mg bromocriptine daily; four of the eight patients had an increase in tumor size during therapy. In cultures of prolactinoma cells from patients normally responsive to bromocriptine therapy (n = 10), considered as controls, 10(-9) mol/L bromocriptine inhibited PRL release by 71 +/- 6% (+/- SE), and the half-inhibitory dose was 7 x 10(-11) mol/L. In contrast, in cultures of prolactinoma cells from five patients resistant to bromocriptine, PRL release was inhibited by only 3-42% at 10(-9) mol/L bromocriptine. This partial inhibition was reversed by a 100-fold excess of haloperidol. In contrast, the effects of other inhibitors of PRL release (10(-8) mol/L T3 and 10(-8) mol/L somatostatin) or of a stimulator (10(-8) mol/L angiotensin-II) on cells from resistant and normally responsive patients were similar. In cell membranes from five bromocriptine-responsive adenomas the density of dopaminergic binding sites, labeled by [3H] spiroperidol was 243 +/- 65 (+/- SE) fmol/mg protein. In adenomas from the eight patients resistant to bromocriptine therapy the density of [3H]spiroperidol-binding sites lower (145 +/- 31 fmol/mg protein). In adenomas from five resistant patients whose tumor had grown during therapy the density of binding sites was 25 +/- 3 fmol/mg protein, 10% of that in normally responsive patients. The effects of dopamine on adenylate cyclase activity also were different in the three groups of adenomas. Dopamine inhibited adenylate cyclase activity by 28.8 +/- 5.6% in five bromocriptine-responsive tumors and by 16.5 +/- 4.3% in adenomas from eight resistant patients. In contrast, in the five patients whose tumors grew during therapy dopamine paradoxically stimulated adenylate cyclase activity (+26.4 +/- 9.8%). There was a very good correlation between the density of dopaminergic binding sites and maximal inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity in bromocriptine-responsive prolactinoma patients (r = 0.90) and resistant patients who had no tumor growth during therapy (r = 0.94).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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