Ganong W F, Deschepper C F, Steele M K, Intebi A
Department of Physiology, University of California, San Francisco 94143-0444.
Am J Hypertens. 1989 Apr;2(4):320-2. doi: 10.1093/ajh/2.4.320.
In rats, angiotensin II appears to be synthesized in the anterior pituitary gland and stored in gonadotropes in the same granules as the beta-subunit of luteinizing hormone (LH). The gonadotropes also contain renin-like and angiotensin-converting enzyme-like immunoreactivity, but angiotensinogen-like immunoreactivity is found in a separate population of cells and does not colocalize with any of the known anterior pituitary hormones. This suggests that angiotensinogen shuttles to the gonadotropes in a paracrine fashion. There are angiotensin II receptors on lactotropes and corticotropes, but no definite function has been established for pituitary angiotensin II in the regulation of prolactin and adrenocorticotropic hormone.