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Associations between the human growth hormone-releasing hormone- and neuropeptide-Y-immunoreactive systems in the human diencephalon: a possible morphological substrate of the impact of stress on growth.

Neuroscience 2008 June 3
Previous studies revealed that stress is a pivotal factor in the regulation of growth. Psychological harassment may result in psychosocial dwarfism with delayed puberty, short stature and depression. Growth hormone (GH) secretion is suppressed by stress, possibly via the attenuation of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) secretion. However, the morphological substrate of this phenomenon has not been elucidated yet. Since neuropeptide Y (NPY) levels in the plasma is increased by administration of various stressors, the common consensus is that NPY plays a crucial role in the stress response. In the present study, we examined the putative juxtapositions between the NPY- and GHRH-immunoreactive (IR) systems in the human hypothalamus using double-label immunohistochemistry. Our findings revealed that the majority of the GHRH-IR perikarya formed intimate associations with NPY-IR fiber varicosities. The majority of these juxtapositions were found in the infundibular nucleus/median eminence where NPY-IR fiber varicosities often covered a significant surface area of the GHRH neurons. Since the juxtapositions between the GHRH-IR perikarya and NPY-IR fiber varicosities may be functional synapses, they may represent the morphological substrate of stress-suppressed GH secretion. The large number of contacting elements indicates that NPY plays a pivotal role in GH release, and may be considered as a major factor in the attenuation of growth by stress in humans.

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