The purpose of this study was to compare the control of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) and corticosterone secretion in homozygous Brattleboro rats with their syngeneic controls, Long-Evans rats, and with rats of the Wistar strain. Plasma concentrations of ACTH and corticosterone were measured by radioimmunoassay in trunk blood, and corticotropin-releasing factor 41 (CRF-41), arginine vasopressin (AVP), and oxytocin were assayed in hypophysial portal vessel blood. Portal plasma was extracted with methanol for CRF-41 determination, and four different antisera and several different high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) systems were used to investigate AVP release. The peripheral plasma concentrations of ACTH and corticosterone were significantly higher in Long-Evans and homozygous Brattleboro than in Wistar rats. This difference was due, at least in part, to an approximately twofold greater release of CRF-41 into hypophysial portal blood of the Long-Evans and Brattleboro compared with Wistar rats. There was no significant difference between the strains in the output of oxytocin into portal blood. While no AVP could be detected in the neural lobe of homozygous Brattleboro rats, a small amount of AVP-like immunoreactivity was detected in unextracted hypophysial portal blood from homozygous Brattleboro rats. However, this AVP-like immunoreactivity was clearly distinct from authentic AVP in several HPLC systems, had no antidiuretic activity, and on gel filtration had a relative molecular mass greater than 5 kD. In contrast, the AVP-like immunoreactivity in hypophysial portal blood from Long-Evans rats co-eluted with authentic AVP in all HPLC systems tested. These findings show that in the homozygous Brattleboro rat authentic AVP is not released into hypophysial portal blood and that, therefore, the normal plasma concentrations of ACTH in this mutant are maintained by CRF-41 and possibly other hypothalamic and/or pituitary factors which facilitate ACTH release.

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