Franco-Bourland R E
Department of Biochemistry, Instituto Nacional de la Nutrición, Salvador Zubirán, México, DF, México.
Neurochem Res. 1998 May;23(5):695-701. doi: 10.1023/a:1022447023840.
Twenty days after bilateral adrenalectomy (ADX) or immediately after the last of three 6-h long immobilization periods, the levels of hypothalamic and neurohypophyseal L-[35S]Cys-labeled arginine vasopressin (AVP), oxytocin (OT), and somatostatin-14 (SRIF) (only stressed animals) were measured simultaneously in male Wistar rats, after third ventricular administration of the labeled precursor, via guide-cannulae. The acetic acid-extracted labeled peptide fractions were purified by two sequential HPLC steps. After a 4 h period of labeling, only L-[35S]Cys-AVP was selectively increased in the hypothalami of ADX-ized rats, compared to the sham-operated animals, possibly reflecting a significant activation of the paraventricular parvocellular (PVC) AVP/corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) neurons. The increased accumulation of neurohypophyseal L-[35S]Cys-labeled AVP and OT in these animals, without changes in the endogenous levels of these peptides, as measured by UV absorbance, also suggests a moderate activation of the magnocellular (MGC) AVP and OT neurons, as a consequence of adrenal insufficiency. In response to immobilization stress, levels of L-[35S]Cys-OT were selectively increased in the hypothalami and corresponding neurohypophyses, 2 h and 4 h after receiving the label, concomitantly with a statistically significant reduction in the stores of OT in the neural lobes. AVP and SRIF biosynthesis remained unaffected by immobilization; the neurohypophyseal AVP stores likewise remained unchanged. These observations suggest the selective activation of MGC-OT neurons in response to chronic immobilization stress. Selective increases in hypothalamic L-[35S]Cys-AVP in ADX-ized rats, and in hypothalamic L-[35S]Cys-OT in chronically stress-immobilized rats, are presented as a measure of PVC-AVP/CRF and MGC-OT neuronal activation, respectively.