The Journal of endocrinology
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Although arginine-vasopressin (AVP) is reported to produce greater ACTH biosynthetic and secretary responses than does corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) in sheep anterior pituitary cells, neither factor appears to increase pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) mRNA levels, as does CRH in the cells of some other species. Since only a fraction of cells that express POMC mRNA may be able to respond to AVP, the aim of this study was to further delineate the regulation of POMC mRNA in ovine anterior pituitary corticotrophs, as a whole and in functional subpopulations of corticotrophs. We measured the effects of AVP, CRH or activation of protein kinase C by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) in cultured cells. ⋯ AVP (55 +/- 8 ng/well) and PMA (120 +/- 17 ng/ well), but not CRH, increased ACTH secretion; POMC mRNA was not significantly elevated by any of the treatments. Taken together, these data provide further support for the notion of dissociation between secretion of ACTH and expression of POMC mRNA, and demonstrate that AVP increases steady-state POMC mRNA levels in ovine anterior pituitary cells. The data are also consistent with the concept that complex interactions, possibly including those between cells, influence ACTH secretion and steady-state POMC mRNA levels.