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Neuroendocrinology | 1990

Differential actions of dopamine receptor subtypes on gonadotropin and growth hormone release in vitro in goldfish

John P. Chang; Kei Li Yu; Anderson O. L. Wong; Richard E. Peter

Incubation of cultured goldfish pituitary cells with 10 nM to 1 microM apomorphine (APO), a non-selective dopamine agonist, increased growth hormone (GH) release in a dose-dependent manner. GH release was also stimulated in a dose-dependent manner by 0.1 nM to 1 microM salmon gonadotropin (GTH)-releasing hormone (sGnRH), sGnRH analog, and chicken GnRH-II (cGnRH-II). The magnitude of GH responses to 1 microM GnRHs were less than that to 1 microM APO. GH responses to 10 nM to 1 microM APO were not significantly increased by the addition of GnRHs. Static incubations with 0.1 nM to 1 microM of the dopamine D1 agonist SKF38393 did not alter basal GTH release, or the GTH responses to 10 nM sGnRH and cGnRH-II. In contrast, the D1 agonist SKF38393 significantly increased basal GH secretion with maximal stimulation achieved at 100 nM concentration, and GH responses to 10 nM sGnRH and 10 nM cGnRH-II were enhanced by simultaneous applications of SKF38393. Incubation with 1 microM of the D2 agonist LY171555 decreased basal GTH release. Additions of 0.1 nM to 1 microM LY171555 caused dose-dependent decreases in the GTH secretion induced by 10 nM sGnRH and cGnRH-II. In contrast, basal and GnRH-stimulated GH release were not affected by coincubations with LY171555. The D1 antagonist SKF83566 and the D2 antagonist domperidone, at 1 microM concentrations, specifically blocked the D1 agonist SKF38393-stimulated increase in GH release and the D2 agonist LY171555-induced depression of GTH secretion, respectively. In cell column perifusion studies, the D1 agonist SKF38393 at 0.1 nM to 1 microM had no effects on GTH release, but significantly elevated GH secretion rates when applied at 0.1-1 microM concentrations. The GH release induced by 1 microM SKF38393 was significantly reduced by simultaneous perifusion with 1 microM of the D1 antagonist SKF83566. Treatments with SKF38393 and/or SKF83566 did not affect net GTH and GH responses to sGnRH challenges. In contrast, perifusion with 0.1 and 1 microM of the D2 agonist LY171555 depressed basal as well as sGnRH-induced GTH responses. These effects of 1 microM LY171555 were completely blocked by simultaneous applications of 1 microM domperidone, a D2 antagonist. Treatments with these D2 selective drugs did not affect basal and sGnRH-stimulated GH release. These results indicate that in cultured goldfish pituitary cells, activation of dopamine D1- and D2-like receptors specifically stimulates GH release and inhibits both basal and stimulated GTH secretion, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Discovery of growth hormone-releasing hormones and receptors in nonmammalian vertebrates

Leo T. O. Lee; Francis K.Y. Siu; Janice K. V. Tam; Ivy T. Y. Lau; Anderson O. L. Wong; Marie C.M. Lin; Hubert Vaudry; Billy K. C. Chow

In mammals, growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) is the most important neuroendocrine factor that stimulates the release of growth hormone (GH) from the anterior pituitary. In nonmammalian vertebrates, however, the previously named GHRH-like peptides were unable to demonstrate robust GH-releasing activities. In this article, we provide evidence that these GHRH-like peptides are homologues of mammalian PACAP-related peptides (PRP). Instead, GHRH peptides encoded in cDNAs isolated from goldfish, zebrafish, and African clawed frog were identified. Moreover, receptors specific for these GHRHs were characterized from goldfish and zebrafish. These GHRHs and GHRH receptors (GHRH-Rs) are phylogenetically and structurally more similar to their mammalian counterparts than the previously named GHRH-like peptides and GHRH-like receptors. Information regarding their chromosomal locations and organization of neighboring genes confirmed that they share the same origins as the mammalian genes. Functionally, the goldfish GHRH dose-dependently activates cAMP production in receptor-transfected CHO cells as well as GH release from goldfish pituitary cells. Tissue distribution studies showed that the goldfish GHRH is expressed almost exclusively in the brain, whereas the goldfish GHRH-R is actively expressed in brain and pituitary. Taken together, these results provide evidence for a previously uncharacterized GHRH-GHRH-R axis in nonmammalian vertebrates. Based on these data, a comprehensive evolutionary scheme for GHRH, PRP-PACAP, and PHI-VIP genes in relation to three rounds of genome duplication early on in vertebrate evolution is proposed. These GHRHs, also found in flounder, Fugu, medaka, stickleback, Tetraodon, and rainbow trout, provide research directions regarding the neuroendocrine control of growth in vertebrates.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1994

Morphological identification of live gonadotropin, growth-hormone, and prolactin cells in goldfish (Carassius auratus) pituitary-cell cultures

Fredrick Van Goor; Jeffrey I. Goldberg; Anderson O. L. Wong; Richard M. Jobin; John P. Chang

To better understand neuroendocrine regulation and the intracellular mechanisms mediating pituitary-hormone release, it is necessary to study the physiology of identified single cells. We have developed a system to identify gonadotropin, growth-hormone, and prolactin cells in primary cultures of goldfish pituitary cells. Using Nomarski differential interference-contrast microscopy, the unique morphologies of discrete subpopulations of cells were characterized. To aid in the initial characterization of different pituitary-cell types, a discontinuous Percoll density-gradient cell-separation technique was developed. This method provided fractions enriched with functional gonadotropin, growth-hormone, and prolactin cells. The morphology of each cell type was initially characterized in enriched fractions of immunofluorescently labelled cells using differential interference-contrast microscopy. The cell type-specific morphologies were then confirmed in live pituitary-cell cultures. Gonadotropin, growth-hormone, and prolactin cells were correctly identified in live pituitary-cell cultures. Gonadotropin, growth-hormone, and prolactin cells were correctly identified in live mixed cultures in 92, 94, and 100% of the trials, respectively. The ability to directly identify cells in primary cultures allows the physiological study of identified single cells with minimal pretreatment.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2013

Goldfish spexin: solution structure and novel function as a satiety factor in feeding control

Matthew K. Wong; Kong-Hung Sze; Ting Chen; Chi Kong Cho; Henry C. H. Law; Ivan K. Chu; Anderson O. L. Wong

Spexin (SPX) is a neuropeptide identified recently by bioinformatic approach. At present not much is known about its biological actions, and comparative studies of SPX in nonmammalian species are still lacking. To examine the structure and function of SPX in fish model, SPX was cloned in goldfish and found to be highly comparable with its mammalian counterparts. As revealed by NMR spectroscopies, goldfish SPX is composed of an α-helix from Gln(5) to Gln(14) with a flexible NH2 terminus from Asn(1) to Pro(4), and its molecular surface is largely hydrophobic except for Lys(11) as the only charged residue in the helical region. In goldfish, SPX transcripts were found to be widely expressed in various tissues, and protein expression of SPX was also detected in the brain. In vivo feeding studies revealed that SPX mRNA levels in the telencephalon, optic tectum, and hypothalamus of goldfish brain could be elevated by food intake. However, brain injection of goldfish SPX inhibited both basal and NPY- or orexin-induced feeding behavior and food consumption. Similar treatment also reduced transcript expression of NPY, AgRP, and apelin, with concurrent rises in CCK, CART, POMC, MCH, and CRH mRNA levels in different brain areas examined. The differential effects of SPX treatment on NPY, CCK, and MCH transcript expression could also be noted in vitro in goldfish brain cell culture. Our studies for the first time unveil the solution structure of SPX and its novel function as a satiety factor through differential modulation of central orexigenic and anorexigenic signals.


Neuroendocrinology | 2002

Regulation of Growth Hormone Release in Common Carp Pituitary Cells by Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase-Activating Polypeptide: Signal Transduction Involves cAMP- and Calcium-Dependent Mechanisms

Dong Xiao; Mable M.S. Chu; Eric K.Y. Lee; Haoran Lin; Anderson O. L. Wong

Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a member of the glucagon/secretin peptide family and its molecular structure is highly conserved among vertebrates. In this study, the role of PACAP in regulating growth hormone (GH) secretion in fish was examined in vitro using common carp pituitary cells under column perifusion. A dose-dependent increase in GH release was observed after exposing pituitary cells to increasing doses of ovine PACAP38 (oPACAP38) and PACAP27 (oPACAP27), but not vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP). A lack of GH response to VIP stimulation is consistent with the pharmacological properties of PAC-1 receptors, suggesting that this receptor subtype may be involved in PACAP-induced GH secretion in carp species. Although the maximal GH responses induced by oPACAP38 and oPACAP27 were similar, the minimal effective dose and ED50 value for oPACAP38 were significantly lower than that for oPACAP27. These results may indicate that common carp PAC-1 receptors are more sensitive to stimulation by oPACAP38 than by oPACAP27. In parallel studies, oPACAP38 and oPACAP27 were also effective in increasing cAMP release, cellular cAMP content, total cAMP production, and intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) levels in common carp pituitary cells. Besides, the rise in [Ca2+]i induced by oPACAP38 was blocked by removing extracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]e) or by treatment with nifedipine, an inhibitor of voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels (VSCC). The dose dependence of PACAP-stimulated GH release in common carp pituitary cells was mimicked by activating adenylate cyclase using forskolin, inhibiting cAMP degradation using IBMX, increasing functional levels of intracellular cAMP using CPT-cAMP, or inducing [Ca2+]e entry using the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. In contrast, the GH-releasing effect of oPACAP38 was suppressed by treatment with the adenylate cyclase inhibitor MDL12330A, protein kinase A inhibitor H89, and VSCC blocker nifedipine, or by perifusion with a Ca2+-free culture medium. These results, as a whole, suggest that PACAP functions as a GH-releasing factor in common carp by activating pituitary receptors resembling mammalian PAC-1 receptors. Apparently, the GH-releasing action of PACAP is mediated through the adenylate cyclase/cAMP/protein kinase A pathway and [Ca2+]e influx through VSCC.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2012

Kisspeptin-1 directly stimulates LH and GH secretion from goldfish pituitary cells in a Ca2+-dependent manner

John P. Chang; Alan Mar; Michael Wlasichuk; Anderson O. L. Wong

It has been established that kisspeptin regulates reproduction via stimulation of hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion, which then induces pituitary luteinizing hormone (LH) release. Kisspeptin also directly stimulates pituitary hormone release in some mammals. However, in goldfish, whether kisspeptin directly affects pituitary hormone release is controversial. In this study, synthetic goldfish kisspeptin-1((1-10)) (gKiss1) enhances LH and growth hormone (GH) release from primary cultures of goldfish pituitary cells in column perifusion. gKiss1 stimulation of LH and GH secretion were still manifested in the presence of the two native goldfish GnRHs, salmon (s)GnRH (goldfish GnRH-3) and chicken (c)GnRH-II (goldfish GnRH-2), but were attenuated by two voltage-sensitive calcium channel blockers, verapamil and nifedipine. gKiss-induced increases in intracellular Ca(2+) in Fura-2AM pre-loaded goldfish pars distalis cells were also inhibited by nifedipine. These results indicate that, in goldfish, (1) direct gKiss1 actions on pituitary LH and GH secretion exist, (2) these actions are independent of GnRH and (3) they involve Ca(2+) signalling.


Endocrinology | 2009

The secretogranin II-derived peptide secretoneurin stimulates luteinizing hormone secretion from gonadotrophs.

E. Zhao; A. Basak; Anderson O. L. Wong; Wendy K. W. Ko; A. Chen; G. C. López; Caleb L. Grey; Luis Fabián Canosa; G. M. Somoza; John P. Chang; Vance L. Trudeau

Secretoneurin (SN) is a 33- to 34-amino acid neuropeptide derived from secretogranin-II, a member of the chromogranin family. We previously synthesized a putative goldfish (gf) SN and demonstrated its ability to stimulate LH release in vivo. However, it was not known whether goldfish actually produced the free SN peptide or whether SN directly stimulates LH release from isolated pituitary cells. Using a combination of reverse-phase HPLC and mass spectrometry analysis, we isolated for the first time a 34-amino acid free gfSN peptide from the whole brain. Moreover, Western blot analysis indicated the existence of this peptide in goldfish pituitary. Immunocytochemical localization studies revealed the presence of SN immunoreactivity in prolactin cells of rostral pars distalis of the anterior pituitary. Additionally, we found that magnocellular cells of the goldfish preoptic region are highly immunoreactive for SN. These neurons send heavily labeled projections that pass through the pituitary stalk and innervate the neurointermediate and anterior lobes. In static 12-h incubation of dispersed pituitary cells, application of SN antiserum reduced LH levels, whereas 1 and 10 nM gfSN, respectively, induced 2.5-fold (P < 0.001) and 1.9-fold (P < 0.01) increments of LH release into the medium, increases similar to those elicited by 100 nM concentrations of GnRH. Like GnRH, gfSN elevated intracellular Ca(2+) in identified gonadotrophs. Whereas we do not yet know the relative contribution of neural SN or pituitary SN to LH release, we propose that SN could act as a neuroendocrine and/or paracrine factor to regulate LH release from the anterior pituitary.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2002

Effects of gonadotropin-releasing hormone on growth hormone secretion and gene expression in common carp pituitary

Wensheng Li; Haoran Lin; Anderson O. L. Wong

Using radioimmuno- and ribonuclease protection assays, we examined the effects of gonadotropin-releasing hormone and its analogs on the growth hormone mRNA level and growth hormone secretion in common carp (Cyprinus carpio) pituitary fragments with static incubation. After a 24 h treatment, sGnRH ([Trp(7),Leu(8)]-LHRH) and sGnRH-A ([D-Arg(6),Pro(9)]-LHRH) (0.1 nM-1 microM) elevated the GH mRNA level and stimulated the GH secretion in a dose-dependent manner, with a higher potency for sGnRH-A. In a time-course experiment, the function of sGnRH and sGnRH-A (10 nM) on GH secretion was observed after 6 h incubation, while no action on the GH mRNA level were noted until 12 h after treatment. Comparing mammalian GnRH, avian GnRH and piscine GnRH, sGnRH and sGnRH-A showed the highest potency in increasing GH mRNA level and GH-release, followed by cGnRH-II ([His(5),Tyr(8)]-LHRH), and finally LHRH and LHRH-A([D-Trp(6), Pro(9)]-LHRH). These findings, taken together, suggest that GnRH not only can influence GH release, but also play a role in the regulation of GH synthesis.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1998

Expression of grass carp growth hormone by baculovirus in silkworm larvae

Walter K.K. Ho; Z.Q. Meng; Haoran Lin; C.T. Poon; Y.K. Leung; K.T. Yan; N. Dias; A.P.K. Che; J. Liu; W.M. Zheng; Y. Sun; Anderson O. L. Wong

A total of five recombinant Bombyx mori nuclear polyhedrosis viruses (BMNPV) carrying the grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idellus) growth hormone (GH) cDNA were constructed in this study. Two of them were able to express the hormone up to a level of 12 microgram/ml medium when cultured B. mori cells were infected for 4 days. Inoculation of the viruses into silkworm (B. mori) host significantly increased the level of GH achievable. The amount of hormone produced per larva was estimated to be around 1 mg. The recombinant grass carp GH had immunological and biological activities similar to the native hormone. The N-terminal sequence of the recombinant hormone was the same as the native one, indicating that the fish signal peptide was correctly processed by the insect cells. Silkworm powder prepared from larvae infected with the recombinant virus was used as food supplement for fish. Compared with the control, this dietary supplement was effective in increasing the growth rate of juvenile carp.


Fish Physiology and Biochemistry | 1998

Direct actions of serotonin on gonadotropin-II and growth hormone release from goldfish pituitary cells: interactions with gonadotropin-releasing hormone and dopamine and further evaluation of serotonin receptor specificity

Anderson O. L. Wong; C.K. Murphy; John P. Chang; C.M. Neumann; A. Lo; Richard E. Peter

In this study, the direct actions of serotonin (5HT) on gonadotropin (GTH)-II and growth hormone (GH) release in the goldfish were tested at the pituitary cell level. 5HT (10 nM - 10 µM) stimulated GTH-II but inhibited GH release from perifused goldfish pituitary cells in a dose-dependent manner. The minimal effective dose of 5HT tested to suppress basal GH secretion (10 nM) was 10-fold lower than that to stimulate GTH-II release (100 nM). The GTH-II releasing effect of 5HT was abolished by repeated 5HT treatment (10 µM) whereas the corresponding inhibition on GH release was unaffected. These results suggest that 5HT receptors on goldfish gonadotrophs and somatotrophs exhibit intrinsic differences in terms of sensitivity to stimulation and resistance to desensitization. Salmon GTH-releasing hormone (sGnRH, 100 nM) stimulated GTH-II and GH release from goldfish pituitary cells. The GTH-II releasing action of sGnRH was unaffected by simultaneous treatment of 5HT (1 µM). However, the corresponding GH response to sGnRH (100 nM) was inhibited. In the goldfish, dopamine is known to stimulate GH release through activation of pituitary D1 receptors. In the present study, the GH-releasing action of dopamine (1 µM) and the D1 agonist SKF38393 (1 µM) was significantly reduced by 5HT (1 µM). To examine the receptor specificity of 5HT action, the effects of 5HT1 and 5HT2 analogs on GTH-II and GH release were tested in goldfish pituitary cells. The 5HT1 agonist 8OH DPAT (0.1 and 1µM) and 5HT2 agonist α methyl 5HT (0.1 1µM) mimicked the GTH-II releasing effect of 5HT. The 5HT1 agonist 8OH DPAT (0.1 and 1µM) also stimulated GH release but the 5HT2 agonist α methyl 5HT (0.1 and 1µM) was inhibitory to basal GH secretion. In addition, 5HT (1µM) -stimulated GTH-II release was abolished by the 5HT1 antagonist methiothepin (10µM) and 5HT2 antagonist mianserin (10µM). Similarly, the inhibitory action of 5HT (1µM) on basal GH release was blocked by the 5HT2 antagonist mianserin (10µM). The 5HT1 antagonist methiothepin (10µM) was not effective in this regard. These results, taken together, indicate that 5HT exerts its regulatory actions on GTH-II and GH release in the goldfish directly at the pituitary cell level, probably through interactions with other regulators including sGnRH and dopamine. The GTH-II releasing action of 5HT is mediated through 5HT2 and possibly 5HT1 receptors. The inhibition of 5HT on basal GH release is mediated through 5HT2 receptors only. Apparently, 5HT1 receptors are not involved in this inhibitory action. In this study, a paradoxical stimulatory component of 5HT on GH release by activating 5HT1 receptors is also implicated.

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Mulan He

University of Hong Kong

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Hong Zhou

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Chengyuan Lin

Hong Kong Baptist University

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Quan Jiang

University of Hong Kong

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Guangfu Hu

University of Hong Kong

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Jin Bai

University of Hong Kong

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