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CARLOS DIEGUEZ, STEVEN M. FOORD, JOHN R. PETERS, REGINALD HALL, MAURICE F. SCANLON, Interactions among Epinephrine, Thyrotropin (TSH)-Releasing Hormone, Dopamine, and Somatostatin in the Control of TSH Secretion in Vitro, Endocrinology, Volume 114, Issue 3, 1 March 1984, Pages 957–961, https://doi.org/10.1210/endo-114-3-957
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Epinephrine and TRH independently release TSH from rat anterior pituitary cells in primary monolayer culture (ED60, 11 and 5 nM, respectively; maximum responses, 80% and 110%, respectively). The effects of these compounds together are additive, even at concentrations at which each is maximally effective alone. Dopamine inhibited basal and epinephrine-stimulated TSH secretion by 25 ± 5% (±SE; ED50, 50 ± 9 nM in each case). Somatostatin was effective against epinephrine-stimulated, but not basal, TSH secretion (80 ± 4% inhibition; ED50, 1 ± 3 nM). The data show that epinephrine is a potential regulator of TSH secretion by its own action and via its interactions with TRH, dopamine, and somatostatin. (Endocrinology114: 957, 1984)