Title: Selective activation of norepinephrine- and epinephrine-secreting chromaffin cells in rat adrenal medulla
Abstract: The differential effects of insulin-induced hypoglycemia and cold exposure on adrenal medullary epinephrine (Epi) and norepinephrine (NE) cells were investigated in male Sprague-Dawley rats. In rats fasted overnight, insulin produced a marked hypoglycemia that resulted in a 70% decrease in adrenal medullary Epi content 3 h after the insulin was administered. No change in NE content was observed. Plasma Epi concentration was increased markedly after insulin, with a smaller increment in NE. In contrast, exposure to a 4 degrees C environment selectively reduced adrenal NE content, with the effect reaching statistical significance at 18 h. Cold exposure also led to a significant rise in plasma NE but not Epi. Both insulin-induced hypoglycemia and cold exposure significantly elevated adrenal dopamine, indicating that catecholamine synthesis was stimulated. Further evidence of enhanced catecholamine formation was the observation that inhibition of synthesis with alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine (AMT) greatly augmented the ability of insulin-induced hypoglycemia to selectively reduce adrenal medullary Epi content. Similarly, in cold-exposed animals, AMT pretreatment accelerated the NE depletion so that a significant decline was observed at 3 h. These results support the conclusion that the two major populations of adrenal catecholamine-secreting cells may be preferentially stimulated by different stressors. Moreover, augmented synthetic activity functions to maintain catecholamine stores in both Epi- and NE-secreting cells.
Publication Year: 1992
Publication Date: 1992-09-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
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Cited By Count: 54
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