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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Comparative effects of corticotropin-releasing factor, arginine vasopressin, and related neuropeptides on the secretion of ACTH and alpha-MSH by frog anterior pituitary cells and neurointermediate lobes in vitro.

The ability of corticoliberin (CRF), urotensin I, sauvagine, arginine-vasopressin (AVP), and mesotocin to stimulate ACTH release by frog anterior pituitary cells and alpha-melanotropin (MSH) by frog neurointermediate lobe was studied in vitro using a perifusion technique. CRF and AVP were found to be potent stimulators of ACTH secretion, whereas urotensin I and sauvagine were totally inactive. In opposition to recent findings in the rat. CRF did not modify alpha-MSH secretion by the frog neurointermediate lobe. Mesotocin, which is present in the parenchymal cells of the frog pars intermedia, had no effect on alpha-MSH release in vitro. No potentiation of CRF- induced ACTH release was observed when anterior pituitary cells were incubated with a combination of AVP and CRF. Together with the recent elucidation of a CRF-like molecule in the frog diencephalon, these results suggest that, in Amphibia, CRF and AVP exert their stimulatory action specifically on distal lobe corticotrophs.[1]

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