Fullerton M J, Smith A I, Clements J A, Funder J W
Medical Research Centre, Prince Henry's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
J Steroid Biochem. 1989 Feb;32(2):303-8. doi: 10.1016/0022-4731(89)90268-9.
Immunoreactive (ir)-dynorphin levels were measured, and the species characterized by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), in the pituitary and hypothalamus of intact and castrate male rats. On HPLC, ir-dynorphin co-eluted with authentic dynorphin A 1-8, dynorphin A 1-17 and dynorphin 1-32 in the hypothalamus and intermediate lobe; in two different reversed phase (RP)-HPLC systems, anterior lobe ir-dynorphin co-eluted uniquely with dynorphin 32 (4K dynorphin). Anterior lobe levels of total ir-dynorphin were significantly lowered 7 days after castration, while HPLC profiles in all tissues remained unchanged. The change in anterior pituitary ir-dynorphin levels was reversed in a dose-related manner by dihydrotestosterone (15-500 micrograms/100 g b. wt/day); estradiol benzoate (3 micrograms/100 g/day) was without effect. The changes on castration and androgen administration suggest that gonadal steroids play a role in the regulation of dynorphin, as well as gonadotrophins and prolactin, within the anterior pituitary gland.