Acidosis activation of the pituitary-adrenal-renal glutaminase I axis
- PMID: 185045
- DOI: 10.1210/endo-99-4-1071
Acidosis activation of the pituitary-adrenal-renal glutaminase I axis
Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that the adrenal glands were necessary for acidosis activation of the mitochondrial glutaminase I pathway. The present studies were undertaken to determine if corticosterone levels are elevated in acidotic rats and if so, whether acidosis stimulates the adrenal glands directly or via the pituitary-adrenal axis. Metabolic acidosis induced by NH4Cl, either acute or chronic, increased corticosterone levels 100 to 130% in intact rats. Acute metabolic acidosis did not activate the mitochondrial pathway in adrenalectomized rats; corticosterone levels were not elevated in hypophysectomized rats nor did activation of the mitochondrial pathway occur in response to acidosis. Therefore, acidosis does not stimulate the adrenal gland directly; rather, it requires the intact pituitary. Administering exogenous corticotropin to hypophysectomized rats resulted in elevation of plasma corticosterone levels and activation of the mitochondrial pathway. The pituitary-adrenal cortex-renal glutaminase I axis apparently operates as a functional unit in the homeostatic response to metabolic acidosis.
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