Graham A D, Longo L D, Cheung C Y
J Dev Physiol. 1986 Aug;8(4):227-35.
In the ovine fetus, the adrenal medulla activity secretes catecholamines into the circulation under normal and stress conditions. Little is known regarding the endocrine regulation of adrenal medullary catecholamine secretion in the fetus. The present study was undertaken to investigate the direct effects of the hormones prolactin, angiotensin II and cortisol on catecholamine release from fetal adrenal medulla, and to determine whether the effect of the hormones change during development into adulthood. Adrenal medulla from fetal, newborn and adult pregnant sheep was collected, dispersed into single cells and plated. Following preincubation, the cells were treated with ovine prolactin or angiotensin II at 8, 40 and 200 micrograms/ml; or cortisol at 10(-8), 10(-7) and 10(-6)M for 24 h. Catecholamine release into the medium were measured at 3, 6, 12 and 24 h. Ovine prolactin at 8 to 200 micrograms/ml significantly stimulated the release of total catecholamines after 12 h of incubation. The effect of prolactin was dose-dependent such that the magnitude of the response increased and the response time shortened with increasing concentrations of prolactin. In addition, the release of all three catecholamines--dopamine, norepinephrine and epinephrine--was significantly elevated. In newborn cells, only the highest concentration of 200 micrograms/ml ovine prolactin stimulated total catecholamine release at 6 h and 12 h, with significant increases of the three catecholamines at 12 h. In maternal cells, stimulation of catecholamine release was observed also with the highest concentration of prolactin tested (200 micrograms/ml) and after 12 h of incubation, when only the release of epinephrine was significantly enhanced by 324%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)