The effect of dehydration on dopamine (DA) release from the neural and intermediate lobes of the rat pituitary gland after electrical stimulation of the pituitary stalk was studied in vitro. The amount of DA released from pituitary lobes of dehydrated rats (no water for 72 h), in which the hormone secretion from the hypophysis, especially the neural lobe, is known to be greatly enhanced, was significantly higher when compared with that from control tissues. In control and dehydrated rats the evoked DA release from the intermediate lobe was higher than that from the neural lobe. After dehydration, the stimulus-evoked DA release from the neural lobe increased by more than 200%, whereas that from the intermediate lobe increased by only 60%, indicating a preferential activation of the DA system of the neural lobe. There was a decrease in DA released per pulse from the combined neuro-intermediate lobe of control rats with increasing number of stimulation pulses. In contrast, DA release per pulse from the neuro-intermediate lobe of dehydrated rats showed a tendency to increase with increasing number of pulses. As the availability of newly synthesized DA is believed to be the limiting factor for transmitter release, the present observations suggested a higher in vitro DA synthesis rate in the tissues from dehydrated rats. This agrees with in vivo results of Alperand his colleagues who found an increased accumulation of L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) in neuro-intermediate lobes of dehydrated rats after inhibition of DOPA-decarboxylase.

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