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Endocrinology, Vol 119, 1989-1995, Copyright © 1986 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

The effects of transient dopamine antagonism on thyrotropin-releasing hormone-induced prolactin release in pseudopregnant rats

DJ Haisenleder, JA Moy, RR Gala and DM Lawson

The effectiveness of TRH in releasing PRL after transient dopamine (DA) blockade was investigated in female rats between days 3 and 11 of pseudopregnancy (PSP). At 0930 h on the morning of the experiment, each animal was injected with the DA antagonist domperidone (0.01 mg/rat, iv) or vehicle (acetic acid in saline); 5 min later, the DA agonist 2- bromo-alpha-ergocryptine maleate (CB-154; 0.5 mg/rat, iv) was administered. Sixty minutes later, TRH (1.0 micrograms/rat, iv) was administered. Blood samples were withdrawn via indwelling catheters before, 5, 20, 40, and 70 min after domperidone or vehicle administration, and 5 and 10 min after TRH administration. On day 3 of PSP, TRH-induced PRL release was significantly enhanced by the domperidone-CB154 treatment compared to that in vehicle-treated control rats. By day 9 of PSP, the effectiveness of TRH in stimulating PRL release after domperidone treatment was decreased by 50% compared to that on day 3 of PSP. This reduction in PRL response to TRH was not due to decreased progesterone levels, as no difference was observed in plasma progesterone between days 3 and 9. Rats that were given domperidone on day 11 of PSP did not exhibit a significant increase in sensitivity to TRH; however, the effectiveness of TRH was enhanced by domperidone on day 11 of PSP in animals that were hysterectomized on day 2 of PSP. Since DA receptor blockage increased the sensitivity to a putative PRL-releasing factor (TRH) and this mechanism was eliminated around the time that the PRL surges of PSP disappear, we suggest that this pituitary mechanism is a critical component of the PRL release mechanism during the surges of PSP. Further, the observed loss of the mechanism between days 9 and 11 of PSP may be due to the direct influence at the anterior pituitary of a uterine PRL inhibitory factor which has been recently described.


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M. E. Freeman, B. Kanyicska, A. Lerant, and G. Nagy
Prolactin: Structure, Function, and Regulation of Secretion
Physiol Rev, October 1, 2000; 80(4): 1523 - 1631.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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