Abstract

Adult rats were given 15 daily subcutaneous injections either of synthetic β1–24-corticotropin or of the corresponding placebo (controls) and were sacrificed 1 h after the final injection. In stimulated animals, the adrenal glands were increased in weight as compared to those of controls. Stereological analysis at light microscopic level of the outer zona fasciculata cells showed moderate volumetric increases of nuclei, cytoplasm and capillaries and a marked volumetric increase of lipid droplets in stimulated animals. Stereologic analysis of electron micrographs confirmed the marked increase in relative volume and surface density of lipid droplets, while volume fractions alone were increased for the Golgi apparatus and decreased for the endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria. Biochemical analysis of the whole adrenal gland showed that the corticotropin injections produced a moderate increase in protein concentration, a marked increase in triglycerides and no appreciable changes in either phospholipid or cholesterol concentrations. The synthetic polypeptide therefore appears to have stimulating trophic effects on adrenal cortical cells, as shown by the increase in protein and cell size. However, it depresses the activity of the two types of organelle, endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria, which have a major functional role in steroid synthesis. The increase of lipid droplets was interpreted as being primarily due to neutral fat accumulation, and secondarily to a diminished utilization of cholesterol for steroid synthesis. These findings suggest that, using this regime of administration, synthetic β1–24 corticotropin, unlike native ACTH, inhibits steroid synthesis.

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