Protein Information

ID 340
Name Substance P
Synonyms Hs.2563; PPT; NK2; NKA; NKNA; Neurokinin 1; Neurokinin 2; Neurokinin A…

Compound Information

ID 333
Name chloralose
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
9588691 Walczewska A, Szkudlarek U, Jakubowska-Naziemblo B, Dziedzic B, Traczyk WZ: Increase of gonadotropin-releasing hormone concentration in pituitary portal blood after substance P administration in male rats. Neuroendocrinology. 1998 Apr;67(4):219-27.
Substance P (SP) affects gonadotropin release from the anterior pituitary gland. In the present study we tested whether SP exerts this effect through GnRH release into pituitary portal blood in intact male rats (INT), orchidectomized rats with s.c. chronically implanted empty Silastic capsule (ORCX), testosterone capsule (ORCX + T), and 17beta-estradiol capsule (ORCX + E2). The pituitary glands were exposed by the transpharyngeal approach under urethane-chloralose anesthesia. Then, the stalk portal vessels were cut and three 30-min portal blood samples were collected. Each first sample of blood was treated as a control before 0.2 ml injection of normal saline, 5 microg, or 25 microg of SP in 0.2 ml of normal saline into the internal carotid artery. GnRH concentration in the purified portal plasma were measured by RIA. Injection of SP into the internal carotid artery caused a significant increase in GnRH concentration in pituitary portal plasma only in INT rats. The higher dose of SP markedly increased GnRH concentration in the 1st blood sample (p < 0.001) and in the 2nd blood sample GnRH concentration was lower but still significant higher than prior SP injection (p < 0.05). The lower dose of SP increased GnRH concentration later, only in the 2nd portal blood sample after intracarotid SP injection (p < 0.001). Injection of normal saline had no effect on GnRH concentration in pituitary portal blood in INT rats. In ORCX, ORCX testosterone- and estrogen-implanted rats portal plasma GnRH concentrations were not changed significantly after injection of both doses of SP. These results indicate that SP stimulates GnRH release into pituitary portal blood and the influence of SP on GnRH neurons depends on the levels of circulating gonadal steroid hormones.
2(0,0,0,2)