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Prolactin

About: Prolactin is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 22356 publications have been published within this topic receiving 609537 citations. The topic is also known as: lactotropin, & PRL,.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results support the concept that the effect of L-tryptophan on the secretion of human prolactin is mediated through its conversion to serotonin and are consistent with reported experimental observations that serotonin may participate in the reciprocal regulation of Prolactin and gonadotropins.
Abstract: Previous studies have demonstrated that the secretion of human prolactin is regulated primarily by factors that influence catecholamines of the hypothalamus. In an effort to identify other factors that may regulate prolactin secretion, the amino acid L-tryptophan, a precursor in the synthesis of serotonin, was infused into normal human volunteers. Intravenous infusion of L-tryptophan, 5-10 g over a 20 min period, but not equivalent amounts of 17 other amino acids, induced marked increases in serum prolactin concentrations in eight normal human volunteers. Increases of 20-200 ng/ml above the control level were observed with peak values at 20-45 min after initiation of the infusion. In addition, infusion of L-tryptophan was associated with decreases in serum concentrations of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and thyrotropin in those subjects in whom the base-line serum hormone concentration was above the lower limits of assay detectability. No consistent change was observed in serum concentrations of growth hormone, cortisol, or glucose. Four subjects with juvenile diabetes demonstrated increases in serum prolactin values comparable with those observed in healthy individuals in response to infusions of L-tryptophan. Serum prolactin values in patients with surgically induced hypopituitarism were undetectable or deficient after infusion of 10 g of L-tryptophan. In this respect, infusion of L-tryptophan was equally effective in these subjects as the standard chlorpromazine stimulation test in identifying patients with hypopituitarism, indicating that the infusion of L-tryptophan may serve as a sensitive and reliable clinical test of prolactin secretory reserve. Further studies relating to the possible mechanism of action of L-tryptophan indicated that infusion of 5-hydroxytryptophan represents a much more potent stimulus for the secretion of prolactin and that premedication with the serotonin antagonist, methysergide maleate, serves to blunt the effect of L-tryptophan on prolactin secretion. These results support the concept that the effect of L-tryptophan on the secretion of human prolactin is mediated through its conversion to serotonin and are consistent with reported experimental observations that serotonin may participate in the reciprocal regulation of prolactin and gonadotropins.

186 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that EGF can elicit major effects on the cellular phenotype and expression of specific genes in the absence of a proliferative response and suggests that E GF can also regulate differentiated cellular functions.
Abstract: Cultured rat pituitary tumor cells, GH3/D6, which synthesize both growth hormone and prolactin, have cell-surface epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor sites (34,000 per cell) that bind 125I-labeled EGF with a high affinity (Kd approximately 1 nM). Prolonged treatment of the cells with EGF did not stimulate cell division but did inhibit thyroid hormone-stimulated cell growth. In addition, EGF altered the morphology of the cells from a rounded to an elongated conformation. EGF also induced a perturbation of chromatin structure in GH3 cell nuclei that was detected by an increase (40%) in the number of rifampicin-resistant initiation sites for bacterial RNA polymerase. This was accompanied by an increased synthesis of prolactin and an inhibition of synthesis of growth hormone. In the presence of EGF, the synthesis of growth hormone was no longer inducible by thyroid hormone, but it remained responsive to glucocorticoids. The results demonstrate that EGF can elicit major effects on the cellular phenotype and expression of specific genes in the absence of a proliferative response. This suggests that EGF can also regulate differentiated cellular functions.

186 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The colocalization and cosecretion of GAL and LHRH and the cooperative action at the level of the anterior pituitary afford important evidence for the functional significance of coexistence of neurotransmitters in neurons of the central nervous system.
Abstract: Galanin (GAL) is widely distributed in the peripheral and the central nervous systems. In the brain, the highest GAL concentrations are observed within the hypothalamus and, particularly, in nerve terminals of the median eminence. This location, as well as GAL actions on prolactin, growth hormone, luteinizing hormone (LH), and LH-releasing hormone (LHRH) secretion, suggest the possibility that GAL may act as a putative hypothalamic-hypophysiotropic hormone. To establish this, GAL and LHRH levels were measured in hypophyseal portal plasma samples using specific radioimmunoassays. Rat galanin (rGAL) concentrations in portal blood were approximately 7-fold higher than those observed in peripheral plasma in male and female (estrus, diestrus) rats, indicating an active secretory process of rGAL into the portal vasculature. Frequent (10 min) sampling revealed that rGAL and LHRH were secreted into the portal circulation in a pulsatile manner with a pulse frequency of one pulse per hour. Interestingly, both hormone series depicted a high degree of coincident episodes. In fact, the probability of random coincidence, calculated by the algorithm HYPERGEO, was less than 0.01. Moreover, the retrograde tracer Fluoro-Gold, when given systemically, was taken up by GAL neurons in the hypothalamus, including a subset of neurons expressing rGAL and LHRH, strengthening the notion of the existence of a GAL neuronal system connected to the hypophyseal portal circulation. These observations reinforce the concept that GAL regulates pituitary hormone secretion. To analyze this in further detail, the effects of rGAL on LH secretion were evaluated under basal and stimulated conditions. rGAL induced a small but dose-dependent increase in LH secretion from cultured, dispersed pituitary cells. Interestingly, rGAL enhanced the ability of LHRH to stimulate LH release. The tight link between GAL and LHRH neuronal systems is strengthened by the observation that during the estrous cycle of the rat, rGAL and LHRH contents in the median eminence show an identical profile (r = 1.00). These data indicate that GAL should be considered as a hypothalamic-hypophysiotropic hormone and as an important neuromodulator of LHRH secretion and action. The colocalization and cosecretion of GAL and LHRH and the cooperative action at the level of the anterior pituitary afford important evidence for the functional significance of coexistence of neurotransmitters in neurons of the central nervous system.

185 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A synthetic preparation of the 41-aminoacid-residue peptide recently isolated from ovine hypothalami and characterised corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) suggests that it, or a related peptide, may be a CRF in man, and it may provide the basis for a new clinical test of pituitary ACTH reserve.

184 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results strongly suggest that the synthesis and segregation of the authentic hormone observed in the presence of membranes proceeds via a nascent prehormone rather than a completed preHormone.
Abstract: Major translation products of bovine pituitary RNA in a wheat germ cell-free system were identified as larger forms (prehormones) of growth hormone and prolactin containing amino-terminal extensions of 26 or 27 and 30 amino acid residues, respectively. However, translation of bovine pituitary RNA in the wheat germ cell-free system in the presence of microsomal membranes prepared from canine pancreas or bovine pituitary yielded products that were of the same size as authentic growth hormone and prolactin; by partial amino-terminal sequence analysis they were shown to contain the correct unique amino-terminal sequence of prolactin and the two correct amino termini of authentic growth hormone; moreover, they were found to be segregated within the microsomal vesicles in that they were largely inaccessible to degradation by proteolytic enzymes. When microsomal membranes were present after rather than during translation, prehormones were neither cleaved nor segregated. These results strongly suggest that the synthesis and segregation of the authentic hormone observed in the presence of membranes proceeds via a nascent prehormone rather than a completed prehormone.

184 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023360
2022585
2021202
2020221
2019180
2018172