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Endocrinology, doi:10.1210/endo-96-3-718
Endocrinology Vol. 96, No. 3 718-724
Copyright © 1975 by the Endocrine Society.
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Evidence that the Pars Intermedia and Pars Nervosa of the Pituitary do not Secrete Functionally Significant Quantities of ACTH

MONTE A. GREER, CATHERINE F. ALLEN, PATRICIA PANTON and JOHN P. ALLEN

Division of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine, University of Oregon Medical School Portland, Oregon 97201

Supported by grants from the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases, National Institutes of Health.

Abstract

We have compared the capacity to secrete ACTH in response to stress or adrenalectomy in control rats and in those with total hypophysectomy (H), adenohypophysectomy (AH) with preservation of the intermediate and the neural lobes, neurohypophysectomy (NH) with removal of the pars nervosa and all or part of the pars intermedia with preservation of the adenohypophysis, or incomplete adenohypophysectomy (IAH) in which a portion of the adenohypophysis and all of the pars intermedia and pars nervosa were left intact. Plasma ACTH measured with an N-terminal antibody that reacts on an equimolar basis with ACTH and {alpha}-MSH but not with other known pituitary hormones was elevated after ether or tourniquet stress in all except the H group. Three weeks after adrenalectomy there was an elevated basal plasma ACTH and an augmented ACTH response to stress in intact and IAH but not in AH rats. When a more specific {alpha}11–24 ACTH antibody was used there was a high plasma ACTH after ether stress in the IAH, NH, and intact groups but not in the AH or H groups. Adrenal weight and plasma corticosterone after tourniquet or ether stress were indistinguishable in the AH and H groups and were much higher and nearly identical in the intact, NH and IAH groups. We conclude that only the adenohypophysis secretes functionally significant amounts of ACTH. Plasma ACTH detected by the N-terminal antibody in the AH group is probably related to {alpha}-MSH or similar peptides and is incapable of maintaining adrenal weight or stimulating corticosterone secretion. (Endocrinology 96: 718, 1975)

Received July 17, 1974.




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N. Halmi, M. Peterson, G. Colurso, A. Liotta, and D. Krieger
Pituitary intermediate lobe in dog: two cell types and high bioactive adrenocorticotropin content
Science, January 2, 1981; 211(4477): 72 - 74.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1975 by The Endocrine Society