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Gamma-hydroxybutyric acid and growth hormone secretion Studies in rats and dogs

✍ Scribed by Antonello E Rigamonti; Eugenio E Müller


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
769 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
0741-8329

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✦ Synopsis


Gamma-hydroxybutyric acid, a gamma-aminobutyric acid metabolite, and baclofen, a gamma-aminobutyric acid B agonist, are endowed with a small growth hormone-releasing activity in human beings. In this study, we have investigated the reciprocal interactions of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid and the gamma-aminobutyric acid B system by evaluating the growth hormone-releasing activity of the two compounds and their respective antagonists in in vivo and in vitro experiments performed in rats and dogs. In in vivo experiments, neither gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (25, 100, 150, and 300 mg/kg, SC) nor baclofen (0.25, 1, 2, 4, and 8 mg/kg, SC) significantly modified growth hormone secretion in 9-day-old rat pups. Similarly, no growth hormone and prolactin release was observed in adult anesthetized rats after administration of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (100 mg/kg, IP) or baclofen (10 mg/kg IP). Equally ineffective on the somatotropic response was the administration of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (200 mg/kg, IP) alone or associated with its specific receptor antagonist NCS-382 (150 mg/kg, IP) given to adult anesthetized rats. In addition, a toxicological dose of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (1500 mg/kg, IP) did not alter baseline growth hormone levels in adult conscious rats. gamma-Hydroxybutyric acid (50 mg/kg, IP) given for 10 days to adult conscious rats did not alter the growth hormone response to the same gamma-hydroxybutyric acid dose given acutely. In conscious dogs, gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (20 and 50 mg/kg, IV) and baclofen (0.15, 0.30 mg/kg, IV) also were ineffective in stimulating growth hormone secretion. In this species, growth hormone response to hexarelin (31.25 g/kg, IV), a potent growth hormone-releasing peptide, was not modified by coadministration of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (50 mg/kg, IV). In in vitro experiments, increasing doses of gammahydroxybutyric acid (10 Ϫ 7 , 10 Ϫ 5 , and 10 Ϫ 3 M) did not alter growth hormone concentrations in media of rat pituitary cell cultures. In contrast, growth hormone-releasing hormone (10 Ϫ 7 M) induced a significant growth hormone release into the media. In conclusion (1) gamma-hydroxybutyric acid is not an effective growth hormone secretagogue; (2) the reciprocal functional interactions between gammahydroxybutyric acid and the gamma-aminobutyric acid B system could not be investigated, due to the ineffectiveness of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid and baclofen to stimulate growth hormone release; and (3) short-term administration of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid does not induce adverse effects amenable to activation of the somatotropic function.


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