Abstract
Five adenohypophyses from donors of the same strain, age, and sex were transplanted under the renal capsule of young adult female rats. At least 3 wk later, enzymatically dispersed cells from eutopic or heterotopic adenohypophyses from the same rat were perifused in vitro in a small chamber. Thyrotropin (TSH) and prolactin (PRL) secretion per 10(6) cells were significantly less from heterotopic than from eutopic cells under all conditions. In cells from euthyroid animals, TRH induced TSH secretion only in the eutopic cells but induced PRL secretion in both eutopic and heterotopic cells. Hypothyroidism increased TRH-induced TSH secretion and content in the cell lysate in both eutopic and heterotopic cells but increased TRH-induced PRL secretion only in the eutopic cells. The increase in TSH secretion induced by hypothyroidism in the heterotopic cells was of borderline statistical significance. The inability of TRH to induce TSH secretion in heterotopic pituitary cells from euthyroid rats may be due to a lower set point for thyroid hormone inhibition of TSH secretion in the heterotopic thyrotrophs. Heterotopic pituitary TSH secretion is probably suppressed by the normal plasma thyroid hormone concentration maintained by the eutopic pituitary and may be stimulated by TRH only in the presence of a subnormal plasma thyroid hormone concentration.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism