| Literature DB >> 15845620 |
Takahiko Fujikawa1, Kenji Tamura, Tomoko Kawase, Yoshiko Mori, Randall R Sakai, Kunihiro Sakuma, Akihiko Yamaguch, Masato Ogata, Hideaki Soya, Kunio Nakashima.
Abstract
Under acute stress conditions in the rat, there is rapid and transient increase in circulating prolactin (PRL). This leads to an elevated expression of the long form of PRLR (PRLR-L) first in the hypothalamus and the choroid plexus. This increase in PRL is involved in the inhibition of stress-induced hypocalcemia and gastric erosion. In this study we used rat PRL and a PRLR morpholino-antisense oligonucleotide to elucidate the mechanism by which hypothalamic PRLR mediates the inhibition of restraint stress in water (RSW)-induced hypocalcemia and gastric erosion. We found that this effect is largely mediated by PRLRs in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), medial preoptic nucleus, and ventromedial hypothalamus. We also show that when measured after 7 h of RSW, microinjection of the PRLR antisense oligonucleotide into these areas down-regulates RSW-enhanced expression of PRLR-L protein in the PVN and increases the plasma PRL level, but does not affect plasma levels of another hormone, GH. Furthermore, our experiments demonstrated that under nonstress conditions, knockdown of the PRLR in the PVN significantly lowers circulating Ca2+ levels, but does not affect gastric erosion. These results suggest that PRL acting on the PRLR-L in the PVN is one of the critical pathways for regulating circulating Ca2+ levels under both acute stress and nonstress conditions.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15845620 DOI: 10.1210/en.2004-1528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrinology ISSN: 0013-7227 Impact factor: 4.736