Full text is available at the source.
Glucocorticosteroids up-regulate the expression of cholecystokinin mRNA in the rat paraventricular nucleus
Glucocorticosteroids increase cholecystokinin gene activity in the rat brain's stress control center
AI simplified
Abstract
Adrenalectomy causes a 75% increase in corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) mRNA labeling in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN).
- The absence of glucocorticoids following adrenalectomy results in increased activity of CRH neurons in the PVN.
- There is a 43% decrease in cholecystokinin (CCK) mRNA labeling in the anterior part of the PVN after adrenalectomy.
- The decrease in CCK mRNA labeling occurs in both the areas containing CRH and those containing oxytocin.
- Corticosterone replacement fully reverses the changes in both CRH and CCK mRNA labeling observed after adrenalectomy.
- Glucocorticoids negatively regulate CRH expression while positively regulating CCK expression in specific PVN neurons.
AI simplified