Literature DB >> 7836890

Horse plasma corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH): characterisation and lack of a late gestational rise or a plasma CRH-binding protein.

M J Ellis1, J H Livesey, R A Donald.   

Abstract

Immunoreactive corticotrophin-releasing hormone (irCRH) was present in methanolic extracts of equine peripheral blood and showed no elevation in maternal peripheral serum in late gestation (0.54 +/- 0.25 pmol/l; mean +/- S.D.) compared with control horses (0.41 +/- 0.15 pmol/l). The irCRH of methanolic extracts of pituitary venous plasma had a similar elution position following reverse-phase HPLC to synthetic human CRH(1-41) and to irCRH released from horse stalk-median eminence tissue incubated in vitro. Gel chromatographic studies showed no evidence for a plasma CRH-binding protein (CRHBP) analogous to that found in human plasma in either peripheral blood from normal or pregnant horses or in pituitary venous plasma sampled from a cannulated horse. CRH-binding activity was detectable in peripheral plasma from one horse, however the molecular size of this was indicative of a gamma-globulin rather than the 37 kDa CRHBP. These studies suggest that, unlike in the human, CRH does not rise to high values in late gestation nor circulate in a bound form in equine plasma.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7836890     DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.1430455

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Endocrinol        ISSN: 0022-0795            Impact factor:   4.286


  3 in total

1.  Pattern of maternal circulating CRH in laboratory-housed squirrel and owl monkeys.

Authors:  M L Power; L E Williams; S V Gibson; J Schulkin; J Helfers; E P Zorrilla
Journal:  Am J Primatol       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 2.371

Review 2.  Does the CRH binding protein shield the anterior pituitary from placental CRH?

Authors:  M Thomson
Journal:  Endocrine       Date:  1998-12       Impact factor: 3.925

3.  Clinical implications of using adrenocorticotropic hormone diagnostic cutoffs or reference intervals to diagnose pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction in mature horses.

Authors:  Remona Horn; Allison J Stewart; Karen V Jackson; Elizabeth L Dryburgh; Carlos E Medina-Torres; François-René Bertin
Journal:  J Vet Intern Med       Date:  2020-12-24       Impact factor: 3.175

  3 in total

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