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Unité de Dynamique des Systèmes Neuroendocriniens, INSERM U-159, Centre Paul Broca, Paris, France
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Dr. Claude Kordon, INSERM U-159, Unité de Dynamique des Systèmes Neuroendocriniens, Centre Paul Broca, 2ter rue dAlésia, Paris F-75014, France.
Protein kinase activators as well as several neuropeptides are able to
increase the GnRH-binding capacity of cultured adenohypophyseal cells.
To determine whether such up-regulation of GnRH-binding sites can be
achieved by a substance(s) endogenous to the pituitary, binding
experiments were performed after exposure of cells to increasing
amounts of medium conditioned by incubation with primary cultures of
adenohypophyseal cells for 4 days. Addition of the conditioned medium
elicited a 50% increase in GnRH binding. Characterization of the
agent(s) responsible for the effect was attempted by submitting the
conditioned medium to molecular sieve filtration, adding or
immunoprecipitating endogenous substances, and comparing the
susceptibilities of the responses to various inhibitors of transduction
processes. Fractionation of the medium indicated that active molecules
were of a proteic nature, with Mr ranging from
5,00010,000. Among major endogenous moieties corresponding to these
criteria [epidermal growth factor (EGF), transforming growth
factor-
, and insulin-like growth factors I and II), only the first
two exhibited properties similar to those of the conditioned medium.
EGF stimulated binding with an EC50 of 3.6 ± 0.8
pM. Immunoprecipitation of EGF, but not transforming growth
factor-
, inactivated the conditioned medium. The effects of both
conditioned medium and EGF were inhibited by herbimycin, a tyrosine
kinase inhibitor; U73122, a phospholipase C inhibitor; and prior
desensitization of protein kinase C. In contrast, both were insensitive
to pertussis toxin pretreatment. In parallel, EGF did not increase LH
secretion by itself, but potentiated its response to GnRH in a
concentration range of 1 pM to 1 nM, resulting
in a shift of the curve toward lower values of GnRH. It is concluded
that EGF is able to control the accessibility of binding sites to GnRH
and to potentiate the responsiveness of gonadotropes to the
decapeptide.
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