Differential regulation of hypothalamic pituitary corticotropin releasing hormone receptors during development of adjuvant-induced arthritis in the rat

in Journal of Endocrinology
Authors:
G Aguilera
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D S Jessop
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M S Harbuz
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A Kiss
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S L Lightman
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Abstract

The expression of corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and CRH receptor mRNA in the PVN and anterior pituitary was studied during development of adjuvant-induced arthritis in Piebald–Viral–Glaxo rats, using in situ hybridization techniques. As previously shown with i.p. hypertonic saline injection, basal and immobilization stress-stimulated CRH mRNA levels in the PVN were significantly lower than in controls 14 days after adjuvant injection. However, 7 days after injection, preceding the onset of inflammation, the increase of CRH mRNA following immobilization was significantly higher than in control rats. In contrast to other chronic stress paradigms, inflammation stress failed to induce type-1 CRH receptor (CRH-R1) mRNA in the PVN, either at 7 days, or at 14 days after adjuvant injection, when inflammation is present. The ability of acute immobilization to induce CRH-R1 mRNA in the PVN was not affected 14 days after adjuvant injection but parallel to the CRH peptide mRNA response it was markedly potentiated at 7 days. Pro-opiomelanocorpin (POMC) mRNA levels in the anterior pituitary increased significantly 14 days after adjuvant injection, and they were unaffected by 1 h immobilization. While CRH binding in the pituitary decreased significantly 14 days after adjuvant injection, CRH-Rl mRNA was unchanged. This study shows biphasic hypothalamic responses to acute stress during development of adjuvant-induced arthritis, with enhanced CRH peptide and CRH-Rl mRNAs responses at 7 days, preceding the onset of inflammation, and blunted CRH mRNA responses at 14 days at the height of the inflammatory response. The lack of CRH receptor expression in the PVN in this model of chronic inflammation stress associated to low hypothalamic CRH peptide levels supports the view that positive feedback regulation by CRH is necessary to maintain enhanced CRH expression during chronic stress.

Journal of Endocrinology (1997) 153, 185–191

 

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