RESUMO
In an attempt to elucidate the role of viruses in certain neuroendocrine disorders, we have demonstrated that infection of endocrine cells (GH-3 and Y-1) in vitro by moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) resulted in diminution of cell-specific secretory function, hormone secretion into culture. In GH-3 (rat anterior pituitary gland) active (initial) and persistent infection by M-MuLV resulted in approximately 80% reduction in prolactin and growth hormone secretion. The adrenal cortex tumor cell line (Y-1), when actively infected with the same virus, showed a transient increase in fluorogenic steroid secretion; however, on subsequent passages of infected cell cultures, steroid secretion was markedly reduced to about 10% of the uninfected Y-1 cells. The virus yield from M-MuLV-infected cultures of Y-1 and GH-3 cells produced a significantly lower amount of virus than the control NIH-3T3-infected cell cultures.