The role of estrogens in the regulation of lactate dehydrogenase activity and its submolecular organization in rat anterior pituitary.

1978 
Estrogens increase LDH activity and decrease H/M subunit ratio in rat anterior pituitary in both the experimental circumstances and the physiological conditions. The cellular messengers mediating estrogenic effect are structure- and stereospecific. The activity increasing and subunit ratio decreasing potency of the three tested estrogens was of following decreasing order: 17 beta-estradiol, estrone, and estriol. 17 alpha-estradiol did not affect activity parameters and submolecular organisation of the enzyme. The estrogen induced activity increase is consequence of the enhanced de novo enzyme protein synthesis which could be inhibited by Actinomycin-D. The lack of adrenocorticoids did not involve the alteration of LDH activity and H/M ratio in female rat anterior pituitary. Accordingly, these steroids do not mediate estrogenic action. 17 beta-estradiol had a substantial increasing effect on LDH activity in the subrenal implanted pituitary homografts and decreased H/M subunit ratio. Pituitary LDH activity in androgenized female rats decreased only after the removal of the polycystic ovaries. The two latter observations suggest that hypothalamic hormones are not involved in the regulation of pituitary LDH activity and its submolecular organization. De novo synthesis of LDH enzyme protein and the regulation its submolecular organization is induced by the direct action on anterior pituitary cells of the estrogens.
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