Author:
Nolan LA,Thomas CK,Levy A
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Glucocorticoid withdrawal in man is associated with transient but sometimes prolonged impairment of hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis secretory responsiveness. This has led to continued concern in the clinical arena. The acute anterior pituitary response to glucocorticoids in the rat includes apoptosis-mediated deletion of a cell population. Whilst continued cell turnover following glucocorticoid withdrawal and the potential for differentiation of uncommitted precursor cells and transdifferentiation of other secretory cell types predicts that, given sufficient time, complete anterior pituitary trophic recovery is likely, this hypothesis has not previously been tested. DESIGN AND METHODS: We have quantified pituitary mitotic and apoptotic rate, as well as corticotroph number and pro-opiomelanocortin transcript prevalence, together with hypothalamic corticotrophin-releasing hormone and vasopressin transcript prevalence 5 weeks after three short dexamethasone treatments each separated by a week. Bilateral adrenalectomy was then carried out as a maximal secretory and trophic stimulus, and the response to a fourth dexamethasone treatment assessed 1 week later. RESULTS: Anterior pituitary mitotic index was significantly higher in rats previously exposed to dexamethasone compared with age-matched controls exposed to dexamethasone for the first time. No differences were found in the subsequent apoptotic response to a fourth dexamethasone treatment or in the levels of paraventricular corticotrophin-releasing hormone or vasopressin transcripts or pituitary pro-opiomelanocortin transcripts. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that full recovery of pituitary mitotic activity takes longer than the recovery of secretory parameters, and suggest that, for several weeks after glucocorticoid exposure, the ability of the pituitary to meet fresh demands placed on it may be suboptimal.
Subject
Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
7 articles.
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