Abstract

The plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP), ACTH, and corticosterone levels and the hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) content were measured after oral administration of 1 ml of 75% ethanol to rats, a model known to induce acute gastric erosions and stress. Elevated plasma AVP, ACTH, and corticosterone levels were detected 1 h after ethanol administration. Treatment with the vasopressin pressor (V(1)) receptor antagonist [d(CH(2))(5)Tyr(Me)-AVP] before ethanol administration significantly reduced the ACTH and corticosterone level increases. A higher hypothalamic CRH content was measured at 30 or 60 min after ethanol administration. V(1) receptor antagonist injection, 5 min before ethanol administration, inhibited the rise in hypothalamic CRH content. The protein synthesis blocker cycloheximide prevented the hypothalamic CRH content elevation after stress. The AVP-, CRH-, and AVP + CRH-induced in vitro ACTH release in normal anterior pituitary tissue cultures was also prevented by pretreatment with the V(1) receptor antagonist. The results support the hypothesis that stress-induced AVP may not only act directly on the ACTH producing anterior pituitary cells but also indirectly at the hypothalamic level via the synthesis and release of CRH.

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