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Pituitary-adrenal response in neonatal rats

Journal Article · · Endocrinology; (United States)

Neonatal rats were, until recently, believed to be relatively nonresponsive to stress. With improved methods now available, rat pups as young as 1-2 days of age have been found to have basal and stimulated plasma corticosterone (B) values approaching those of adults but have very low values at 4-11 days which increase thereafter and reach adult values at about 21 days of age. We examined the responsiveness of neonatal rats to the administration of a crude preparation of corticotropinreleasing factor (CRF) and ACTH to determine the locus of the variation with age of the response. Plasma B increased in 1-day-old rats after ACTH or CRF. In 7-day-old rats, neither caused increases in plasma B. Some response after these stimuli was elicited in 14-day-old rats, and the responses of 21-day-old rats approached those in adults. Adrenal tissue from rats of the same ages showed a pattern of sensitivity to ACTH in vitro similar to that in vivo, except that the response of adrenals from 21-day-old rats was still feeble. Pretreatment of rat pups for the first 6 postnatal days with ACTH or corticosterone resulted in a moderate increase in plasma B after CFR or ACTH on day 7. The postnatal fall in sensitivity is partially explained by a decreased adrenal sensitivity to ACTH.

Research Organization:
Univ. of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, NY
OSTI ID:
5483627
Journal Information:
Endocrinology; (United States), Journal Name: Endocrinology; (United States) Vol. 106:3; ISSN ENDOA
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English