Literature DB >> 9524732

Hypothalamic and hypophyseal regulation of growth hormone secretion.

M T Bluet-Pajot1, J Epelbaum, D Gourdji, C Hammond, C Kordon.   

Abstract

1. Regulation of pulsatile secretion of growth hormone (GH) relies on hypothalamic neuronal loops, major transmitters involved in their operation are growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) synthetized mostly in arcuate nucleus (ARC) neurons, and somatostatin (SRIH), synthetized both in hypothalamus periventricular (PVe) and ARC neurons. 2. Neurons synthetizing both peptides can inhibit each other in a reciprocal manner. Other neuropeptides synthetized in ARC neurons, such as galanin, or in ARC interneurons, such as neuropeptide Y (NPY), are able to modulate synthesis and release of GHRH and SRIH into the hypothalamohypophyseal portal system. 3. In addition, the hitherto uncharacterized endogenous ligand of the recently cloned growth hormone releasing peptide receptor, expressed mostly in the ARC, triggers GH release, presumably by actions on ARC interneurons. 4. Thyroid, gonadal, and adrenal steroid hormones also affect the GHRH-SRIH balance; a differential distribution of sex steroid receptors in the ARC and the PVe is likely to account for the different pattern of GH secretion in male and female animals. 5. Growth hormone itself is able to inhibit the amplitude of GH secretory episodes and to increase their frequency, by entering the brain (presumably by receptor-mediated internalization at the level of the choroid plexus) and acting subsequently on ARC neurons. 6. At the pituitary level, major neurotransmitters regulating GH cells act on receptors of the VIP/PACAP/GHRH family and of the somatostatin family, in particular, sst2 and sst3. Those are coupled to accumulation of cAMP as a second messenger. 7. In addition, patch-clamp experiments and measurement of intracellular Ca2+ indicate that GH cells present characteristic, GHRH-dependent, but self-maintained Ca2+ spikes and [Ca2+]i transients, which reflect adaptive mechanisms to constraints of episodic release. 8. Recent data on transcription factors affecting GH gene expression and somatotrope differentiation are also summarized. 9. Regulation and differentiation of somatotropes also depend upon paracrine processes within the pituitary itself and involve growth factors and several neuropeptides, for instance, vasoactive intestinal peptide, angiotensin 2, endothelin, and activin. 10. Finally, characteristic changes occur in the GH secretory pattern under discrete, pathological conditions, such as abnormal growth and dwarfism, diabetes, and acromegaly, as well as during inflammatory processes.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9524732     DOI: 10.1023/a:1022579327647

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Mol Neurobiol        ISSN: 0272-4340            Impact factor:   5.046


  142 in total

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Review 8.  Resistance to somatostatin (SRIH) analog therapy in acromegaly. Re-evaluation of the correlation between the SRIH receptor status of the pituitary tumor and the in vivo inhibition of GH secretion in response to SRIH analog.

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10.  9-cis retinoic acid regulation of rat growth hormone gene expression: potential roles of multiple nuclear hormone receptors.

Authors:  A Sugawara; P M Yen; W W Chin
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  1994-11       Impact factor: 4.736

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