Abstract

Thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) produced a rapid dose related elevation of muscle tonus accompanied by tremor and shivering-like movements in cats. This stimulant action of TRH also occurred in decerebrate cats and cats which had undergone spinal cord transection at the level of the first cervical vertebra. Recordings froir spinal cord ventral roots indicated that TRH induced a pronounced increase in spontaneous motor neuron action potentials. No such stimulation of muscle activity was produced by injections of thyrotropin (TSH), triiodothyronine (T 3), deamidated TRH, or the constituent amino acids of TRH, pyroglutamic acid, histidine, and proline amide. Results suggest that TRH can act directly on the spinal cord to stimulate muscle activity via a nonendocrine mechanism.

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