» Articles » PMID: 2754370

Effect of Fetal Hypophysectomy on the Localization of the Catecholamine Biosynthetic Enzymes and Enkephalins in the Adrenal Medulla of the Fetal Sheep

Overview
Journal J Endocrinol
Specialty Endocrinology
Date 1989 Jun 1
PMID 2754370
Citations 1
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

We have investigated the effect of fetal hypophysectomy on the localization of dopamine B-hydroxylase (DBH), phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT) and enkephalin-containing peptides in the fetal sheep adrenal, using immunocytochemical techniques. Staining with anti-DBH was observed throughout the adrenal medulla in the intact (140-146 days of gestation) and hypophysectomized fetal sheep (147-164 days of gestation) and the newborn lamb (10-12 days after birth). In the adrenal medulla of the late-gestation intact fetal sheep and newborn lamb, positive staining with anti-PNMT was observed in the peripheral rim of medullary cells adjacent to the adrenal cortex. After hypophysectomy, there was intense positive staining with anti-PNMT in the peripheral adrenal medullary cells and a small and variable proportion of central adrenal medullary cells were stained with anti-PNMT. In the adrenal gland of the intact fetal sheep and the newborn lamb, there was intense staining with anti-enkephalin in the peripheral rim of adrenal medullary cells. Staining with anti-enkephalin was less intense in the central medullary cells of the adrenal gland of the intact fetal sheep and the 10- to 12-day-old newborn lamb, and many unstained central medullary cells were present. After hypophysectomy, intense positive staining with anti-enkephalin was observed throughout the entire fetal adrenal medulla. Therefore, the fetal pituitary, either directly or indirectly through the adrenal cortex, plays a role in regulating the pattern of localization of both PNMT and enkephalin in the fetal sheep adrenal.

Citing Articles

Noradrenergic innervation of the human adrenal cortex as revealed by dopamine-beta-hydroxylase immunohistochemistry.

Charlton B, McGadey J, Russell D, Neal D J Anat. 1992; 180 ( Pt 3):501-6.

PMID: 1336772 PMC: 1259650.