Abstract
Release of vasopressin (AVP) and oxytocin (OT) from rat median eminence and posterior pituitary tissue was studied in vitro by incubation in Krebs-56 mM KCl buffer. Both total tissue content and releasable pool of each hormone was measured in control rats, adrenalectomized rats and dexamethasone-treated rats. Adrenalectomy resulted in significantly increased release of AVP, but not OT, from median eminence tissue, whereas dexamethasone treatment failed to affect release of either hormone. Neither treatment had any effect on AVP or OT release from posterior pituitary tissue. Similarly, neither treatment caused any significant changes in total median eminence or posterior pituitary AVP and OT contents relative to controls, although dexamethasone-treated rats had a significantly lower posterior pituitary OT content than adrenalectomized rats. KCl-stimulated hormone release from median eminence tissue most likely represents an estimate of AVP and OT in zona externa terminals rather than in zona interna axons, because release was blocked by CoCl2 indicating calcium-dependent exocytosis. Immunohistochemical staining of median eminence tissue correlated well with the results of in vitro hormone release, in that increased AVP staining in the zona externa of adrenalectomized rats was also the only significant change noted using this methodology. Since increased levels of releasable AVP in the median eminence probably reflects similarly increased AVP levels in the hypothalamo-hypophyseal portal vessels of adrenalectomized rats, these results support a potential physiologic role for median eminence AVP, but not OT, in the chronic stimulation of adrenocorticotropin hormone secretion following adrenalectomy.