ESSAYS ON APS CLASSIC PAPERS Adrenocortical function, feedback, and alphabet soup
نویسنده
چکیده
IN THE 1930S, scientists were not wordy. Dwight J. Ingle and Edward C. Kendall published an approximately one-columnlong paper (half a page, with data) in Science that concluded: “Our results indicate that the anterior pituitary or some mechanism which controls its activity is sensitive to variation in the amount of cortin in body fluids or to physiologic functions influenced by cortin and that changes in the adrenal are mediated by changes in the output of the adrenotropic principle from the pituitary” (8). Ingle and Kendall (Fig. 1) had previously reported that this might be so through studies of the effects of cortin (adrenocortical extract) on adrenal regeneration. However, Ingle followed up the suggestion provided in the Science paper with an immaculate three-page paper in the American Journal of Physiology that nailed the issue (7). Typical of Ingle’s work, the four sets of controls for the two experimental groups were both necessary and sufficient to answer the question. The observation was that treatment of rats with cortin resulted in marked adrenal atrophy; the question was whether the treatment was a consequence of a direct effect of cortin on the adrenals or an indirect effect through modulation of ACTH secretion from the anterior pituitary. Ingle chose to answer the question by treating intact and hypophysectomized rats with large daily doses of cortin and to treat a second group of hypophysectomized rats with both an ACTH preparation and cortin, thus testing whether the effects of cortin were direct or indirect. However, hypophysectomized rats eat less and have small adrenals, so Ingle included a pair-fed intact group to test whether reduced feeding decreased adrenal weight (it did not). The paper includes a table of final body weight and a figure showing scattergrams of the six groups of rats studied. The issue was put to bed: cortin caused adrenal atrophy; injection of ACTH in hypophysectomized rats blocked the cortin-induced adrenal atrophy. Therefore, Ingle appropriately concluded that “the hypothesis that atrophy of the adrenal cortex may be due to restriction of the output of the adrenocorticotropic principle of the anterior lobe of the pituitary is supported by these observations” (7), and a cottage industry in trying to understand further the long-loop negative feedback action(s) of glucocorticoids on function of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis was born. This cottage industry persists to the present, with many labs throughout the world in hot pursuit of how, and where, glucocorticoids exert their major inhibitory effects on the HPA axis, and the issue is still not resolved. Many suggest that the feedback actions of glucocorticoids on ACTH secretion are on the hippocampus, where there is such a seductively high concentration of receptors (see, e.g., Refs. 4, 6, 11); others suggest that a major site is at the corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) neurons in the hypothalamus (see, e.g., Refs. 3 and 5), and still others point to the corticotrope in the anterior pituitary as a major site (see, e.g., Refs. 10 and 12). Agreement is yet to come about on the issue so clearly raised by Ingle in the 1930s. Ingle and Kendall worked closely together at the Mayo Clinic in the 1930s, and it was a very effective collaboration that continued, between the consummate physiologist and the equally consummate chemist. Kendall was responsible for characterization and synthesis of many adrenal steroids, and in 1950 he shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on adrenal steroids with Tadeus Reichstein at the Pharmaceutical Institute in Basel, Switzerland, and with Philip S. Hench, who demonstrated the powerful effects of treating patients with rheumatoid arthritis, as well as a host of other diseases, with synthetic preparations of cortisone (1). It is because of the work of Kendall and Reichstein that the adrenal Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. Dallman, Dept. of Physiology Univ. of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-0444 (e-mail: [email protected]). Fig. 1. Dr. Dwight J. Ingle. (Courtesy, Dept. of Public Relations, University of Chicago) Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 289: E361–E362, 2005; doi:10.1152/classicessays.00033.2005.
منابع مشابه
Teaching glucocorticoid negative feedback and adrenocortical regulation using a classic paper by Dr. Dwight Ingle.
The American Physiological Society (APS) Legacy Project and its accompanying Essays on APS Classic Papers have allowed the scientific community on-line access to the entire collection of APS publications since their inception in 1898 (http://www.the-aps.org/publications/legacy/ and http://www.the-aps.org/publications/classics/). The availability of the classic physiological studies provides a u...
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