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Adrenal responsiveness and the timing of parturition in hypothalamo-pituitary disconnected ovine foetuses with and without constant adrenocorticotrophin infusion

Adrenal responsiveness and the timing of parturition in hypothalamo-pituitary disconnected ovine foetuses with and without constant adrenocorticotrophin infusion
Adrenal responsiveness and the timing of parturition in hypothalamo-pituitary disconnected ovine foetuses with and without constant adrenocorticotrophin infusion

Ovine parturition results from an increase in foetal cortisol secretion in late gestation which is dependent on an intact hypothalamo-pituitary connection. The cortisol surge and parturition fails in hypothalamo-pituitary disconnected (HPD) foetuses but, paradoxically, immunoreactive (ir)-ACTH concentrations and secretory dynamics appear normal. This study compares the occurrence and timing of labour, basal ir-ACTH and cortisol concentrations and adrenal responsiveness in HPD foetuses (HPD/ACTH) receiving constant ACTH(1-24) infusion (43 ng/h/kg) from surgery (114+/-1 days gestational age (GA)) with those of saline-infused HPD or intact foetuses (HPD/SAL and INT/SAL). HPD/ACTH foetuses initiated labour at 147+/-2 days GA, which was not significantly different from INT/SAL foetuses (149+/-1 day GA). HPD/SAL foetuses were killed electively at 146+/-3 days GA with no signs of labour. Foetal ir-ACTH concentrations in all groups were indistinguishable, but only HPD/ACTH and INT/SAL foetuses had a significant cortisol surge. Adrenal responsiveness to ACTH(1-24)(1 microg/kg) was greater in HPD/ACTH foetuses than in HPD/SAL or INT/SAL foetuses at all GAs studied. Adrenal responsiveness in HPD/SAL foetuses exceeded that in INT/SAL foetuses at 120 and 130 days GA but did not change with GA. In summary, the basal cortisol and parturition defect in HPD foetuses was reversed by low-dose ACTH(1-24) infusion. Basal cortisol concentrations were unrelated to adrenal responsiveness. HPD/SAL foetuses had hyper-responsive adrenals compared to those of INT/SAL foetuses until 130 days GA, suggesting that the foetal hypothalamus exerts a negative influence on adrenal cortisol responses before 130 days GA, after which time stimulatory influences predominate.

Adrenal Glands, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone, Animals, Fetus, Gestational Age, Hypothalamus, Pituitary Gland, Pregnancy, Sheep, Journal Article
0953-8194
343-349
Poore, K.R.
b9529ba3-6432-4935-b8fd-6e382f11f0ad
Canny, B.J.
28dd8cd7-98e8-4c48-8658-b856d2aed6dd
Young, I.R.
52173df6-255b-4cd7-917a-69d52f3623e7
Poore, K.R.
b9529ba3-6432-4935-b8fd-6e382f11f0ad
Canny, B.J.
28dd8cd7-98e8-4c48-8658-b856d2aed6dd
Young, I.R.
52173df6-255b-4cd7-917a-69d52f3623e7

Poore, K.R., Canny, B.J. and Young, I.R. (1999) Adrenal responsiveness and the timing of parturition in hypothalamo-pituitary disconnected ovine foetuses with and without constant adrenocorticotrophin infusion. Journal of Neuroendocrinology, 11 (5), 343-349. (doi:10.1046/j.1365-2826.1999.00340.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Ovine parturition results from an increase in foetal cortisol secretion in late gestation which is dependent on an intact hypothalamo-pituitary connection. The cortisol surge and parturition fails in hypothalamo-pituitary disconnected (HPD) foetuses but, paradoxically, immunoreactive (ir)-ACTH concentrations and secretory dynamics appear normal. This study compares the occurrence and timing of labour, basal ir-ACTH and cortisol concentrations and adrenal responsiveness in HPD foetuses (HPD/ACTH) receiving constant ACTH(1-24) infusion (43 ng/h/kg) from surgery (114+/-1 days gestational age (GA)) with those of saline-infused HPD or intact foetuses (HPD/SAL and INT/SAL). HPD/ACTH foetuses initiated labour at 147+/-2 days GA, which was not significantly different from INT/SAL foetuses (149+/-1 day GA). HPD/SAL foetuses were killed electively at 146+/-3 days GA with no signs of labour. Foetal ir-ACTH concentrations in all groups were indistinguishable, but only HPD/ACTH and INT/SAL foetuses had a significant cortisol surge. Adrenal responsiveness to ACTH(1-24)(1 microg/kg) was greater in HPD/ACTH foetuses than in HPD/SAL or INT/SAL foetuses at all GAs studied. Adrenal responsiveness in HPD/SAL foetuses exceeded that in INT/SAL foetuses at 120 and 130 days GA but did not change with GA. In summary, the basal cortisol and parturition defect in HPD foetuses was reversed by low-dose ACTH(1-24) infusion. Basal cortisol concentrations were unrelated to adrenal responsiveness. HPD/SAL foetuses had hyper-responsive adrenals compared to those of INT/SAL foetuses until 130 days GA, suggesting that the foetal hypothalamus exerts a negative influence on adrenal cortisol responses before 130 days GA, after which time stimulatory influences predominate.

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Poore et al 1999 J Neuroendo 11pp343-349 - Version of Record
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Published date: May 1999
Keywords: Adrenal Glands, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone, Animals, Fetus, Gestational Age, Hypothalamus, Pituitary Gland, Pregnancy, Sheep, Journal Article

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413240
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413240
ISSN: 0953-8194
PURE UUID: 1cb1dc7f-c3c0-4560-9b7e-df2cf6fb08ee
ORCID for K.R. Poore: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1455-0615

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Date deposited: 17 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:29

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Author: K.R. Poore ORCID iD
Author: B.J. Canny
Author: I.R. Young

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