IBYME   02675
INSTITUTO DE BIOLOGIA Y MEDICINA EXPERIMENTAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Neurotransmitter modulation of the GHRH-GH axis
Autor/es:
ISABEL GARCÍA-TORNADU, GABRIELA RISSO, MARIA INES PEREZ-MILLAN, DANIELA NOAIN,; GRACIELA DIAZ-TORGA; MALCOLM J. LOW, MARCELO RUBINSTEIN,; DAMASIA BECU-VILLALOBOS
Revista:
FRONTIERS OF HORMONE RESEARCH.
Editorial:
KARGER
Referencias:
Año: 2010 vol. 38 p. 59 - 69
ISSN:
0301-3073
Resumen:
The role of dopaminergic receptors in the control of GH release remains controversial. The dopamine receptor 2 (D2R) knockout mouse represents a useful model to study the participation of the D2R on growth and GHRH-GH regulation. These knockout mice have hyperprolactinemia and lactotrope hyperplasia, but unexpectedly, they are also growth retarded. In D2R knockout mice there is a significant decrease in somatotrope population, which is paralleled by decreased GH content and output from pituitary cells. The sensitivity of GHRH-induced GH and cAMP release is similar between genotypes, even though the response amplitude is lower in knockouts. We point to an involvement of D2R signaling at the hypothalamic level as dopamine did not release GH acting at the pituitary level, and both somatostatin and GHRH mRNA expression are altered in knockout mice. The similarity of the pituitary defect in the D2R knockout mouse to that of GHRH deficient models suggests a probable mechanism. Loss of dopamine signaling via hypothalamic D2Rs at a critical age may cause inadequate GHRH secretion subsequently leading to inappropriate somatotrope lineage development.  Furthermore, GH pulsatility, which depends on a regulated temporal balance between GHRH and somatostatin output might be compromised in D2R knockout mice, leading to lower IGF-I, and growth retardation.