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GLUCOCORTICOIDS AS A REGULATORY FACTOR FOR BRAIN TRYPTOPHAN HYDROXYLASE
134
Citations
45
References
1976
Year
Replacement InjectionsBrain DevelopmentHuman GrowthNeuroendocrinologyGlucocorticoidSocial SciencesRepeated InjectionsAdrenal GlandNeuroendocrine MechanismNeurologyNeuroimmunologyNeurochemistryNeuropharmacologyDevelopmental EndocrinologyBrain Tryptophan HydroxylaseFetal NeurodevelopmentEndocrinologyPharmacologyClinical DisordersNeurophysiologyNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryMedicine
Abstract —The normal developmental rise of tryptophan hydroxylase levels in neonatal rat brain was blocked by adrenalectomy. Similarly, adrenalectomy prevented the rescrpine‐induced elevation of tryptophan hydroxylase activity in brain stem of adult mice. In both cases, the effects of adrenalectomy could be reversed by replacement injections of corticosterone. Repeated injections of corticosterone (5 mg/kg daily) in fact induced a rise of brain tryptophan hydroxylase levels in neonatal brain. However, neither adrenalectomy nor repeated injections of large doses of the hormone (20 mg/kg, daily) was found to be effective in affecting the normal enzyme levels in adult brain. Apparent K m of the enzyme for substrate was unchanged by corticosterone in vivo or in vitro. These results indicate that glucocorticoids have a significant role in the regulation of brain tryptophan hydroxylase: possibly as an inducing signal during neonatal development and as a permissive factor at adult age.
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