Osterlund Chad D, Rodriguez-Santiago Mariana, Woodruff Elizabeth R, Newsom Ryan J, Chadayammuri Anjali P, Spencer Robert L
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado 80309.
Endocrinology. 2016 Jul;157(7):2785-98. doi: 10.1210/en.2016-1123. Epub 2016 May 4.
Normal glucocorticoid secretion is critical for physiological and mental health. Glucocorticoid secretion is dynamically regulated by glucocorticoid-negative feedback; however, the mechanisms of that feedback process are poorly understood. We assessed the temporal characteristics of glucocorticoid-negative feedback in vivo using a procedure for drug infusions and serial blood collection in unanesthetized rats that produced a minimal disruption of basal ACTH plasma levels. We compared the negative feedback effectiveness present when stress onset coincides with corticosterone's (CORT) rapidly rising phase (30 sec pretreatment), high plateau phase (15 min pretreatment), or restored basal phase (60 min pretreatment) as well as effectiveness when CORT infusion occurs after the onset of stress (5 min poststress onset). CORT treatment prior to stress onset acted remarkably fast (within 30 sec) to suppress stress-induced ACTH secretion. Furthermore, fast feedback induction did not require rapid increases in CORT at the time of stress onset (hormone rate independent), and those feedback actions were relatively long lasting (≥15 min). In contrast, CORT elevation after stress onset produced limited and delayed ACTH suppression (stress state resistance). There was a parallel stress-state resistance for CORT inhibition of stress-induced Crh heteronuclear RNA in the paraventricular nucleus but not Pomc heteronuclear RNA in the anterior pituitary. CORT treatment did not suppress stress-induced prolactin secretion, suggesting that CORT feedback is restricted to the control of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis elements of a stress response. These temporal, stress-state, and system-level features of in vivo CORT feedback provide an important physiological context for ex vivo studies of molecular and cellular mechanisms of CORT-negative feedback.
正常的糖皮质激素分泌对身心健康至关重要。糖皮质激素的分泌受糖皮质激素负反馈动态调节;然而,该反馈过程的机制尚不清楚。我们通过在未麻醉大鼠中进行药物输注和连续采血的程序来评估体内糖皮质激素负反馈的时间特征,该程序对基础促肾上腺皮质激素血浆水平的干扰最小。我们比较了应激开始与皮质酮(CORT)快速上升期(预处理30秒)、高原期(预处理15分钟)或恢复基础期(预处理60分钟)时的负反馈效果,以及应激开始后(应激开始后5分钟)输注CORT时的效果。应激开始前的CORT治疗能非常迅速地(30秒内)抑制应激诱导的促肾上腺皮质激素分泌。此外,快速反馈诱导不需要应激开始时CORT的快速增加(激素速率无关),且这些反馈作用持续时间相对较长(≥15分钟)。相比之下,应激开始后的CORT升高产生的促肾上腺皮质激素抑制有限且延迟(应激状态抵抗)。在室旁核中,CORT对应激诱导的促肾上腺皮质激素释放激素异核RNA的抑制存在平行的应激状态抵抗,但在前垂体中对阿黑皮素原异核RNA不存在这种情况。CORT治疗不能抑制应激诱导的催乳素分泌,这表明CORT反馈仅限于对应激反应中下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺轴元件的控制。体内CORT反馈的这些时间、应激状态和系统水平特征为CORT负反馈的分子和细胞机制的离体研究提供了重要的生理背景。