The effects of insulin on basal and hydrocortisone-induced growth hormone (GH) secretion were studied in rat pituitary tumor cells (GH3). Cells were grown in monolayer culture and exposed to exogenously added insulin for up to 8 d. Basal GH secretion was inhibited by insulin (0.7 nM) after a 48-h lag period by approximately 50% (P less than 0.01, vs. untreated control cells). The suppression of GH secretion was reversible, as removal of added insulin resulted in return of GH secretion to normal levels after 24 h. Maximal suppression of basal GH secretion was achieved by 0.7 nM insulin, and these effects were prevented by simultaneous exposure of the cells to guinea pig anti-insulin serum (1:2,000). No effects of insulin on cell replication were evident, and glucose concentration in the medium did not differ in control or insulin-treated wells. Insulin (7 nM) significantly suppressed the fivefold hydrocortisone-induced GH stimulation during 5 d of incubation with up to 1,000 nM of the steroid (P less than 0.001). These inhibitory effects were similarly observed in glucose- and pyruvate-free medium, and in the presence of 2-deoxyglucose. Insulin also reversed the suppression of prolactin (PRL) secretion induced by hydrocortisone (1 uM), and actually stimulated basal PRL secretion by over 50%. Insulin did not alter the inhibitory effect of hydrocortisone on GH3 cell proliferation. Although higher doses (13 nM) of insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I) also suppressed basal GH secretion, IGF-I did not alter the GH and PRL secretory changes induced by hydrocortisone. The results show that insulin exerts a direct, specific inhibitory effect on basal and hydrocortisone-induced GH secretion by GH3 cells unrelated to glucose utilization by the cells.
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