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1 Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA; Department of Neuroscience, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: engel002{at}umn.edu.
Compensatory adrenal growth after unilateral adrenalectomy leads to adrenocortical hyperplasia.
Because zonal growth contributions are not clear, we characterized the phenotype of cortical cells that
proliferate using immunofluorescence histochemistry and zone-specific cell counting. Rats underwent
unilateral adrenalectomy (ULA), sham adrenalectomy (Sham) or no surgery (No-Surgery) and were
killed at 2 or 5 days. Adrenals were weighed and sections immunostained for Ki67 (proliferation),
cytochrome P450 aldosterone synthase (P450aldo, glomerulosa), and cytochrome P450 11
-hydroxylase
(P45011
, fasciculata). Unbiased stereology was used to count proliferating glomerulosa and fasciculata
cells. Adrenal weight increased after ULA compared to Sham and No-Surgery at both time points, and
there was no difference between Sham and No-Surgery. However, either ULA or Sham increased Ki67-
positive cells in the outer fasciculata at both time points compared to No-Surgery. Outer fasciculatarestricted
proliferation is thus associated with adrenal weight gain in ULA but not Sham. Experiment
repetition using proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) showed
similar results. Following ULA, adrenal DNA, RNA and protein increased at both time points, whereas
after Sham only adrenal DNA increased at 2 days. Compensatory growth thus results from hyperplasia
and hypertrophy, whereas sham surgery induces only a transient adrenal hyperplasia. Dexamethasone
pretreatment prevented the increase in adrenal weight after ULA and blocked Ki67 labeling in the outer
fasciculata but not zona glomerulosa in all groups. These results clearly show that the outer fasciculata
is the primary adrenal zone responsible for compensatory growth, responding to steroid suppressible
stress signals that alone are ineffective in increasing adrenal mass.
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