Glutamine synthetase (GS) is a glucocorticoid-inducible enzyme that has a key role for glutamate
metabolism in the central and peripheral nervous system. In this study GS activity was measured and the
amount of immunoreactive GS (ir-GS) cells in the rat anterior pituitary gland was quantified as a function
of age. In addition, the effects of GS inhibitors, glucocorticoid administration, and adrenalectomy on GS
activity were examined. Some of the ir-GS cells were also immunoreactive for S100 protein (ir-S100) which
is a known marker for folliculostellate cells (FS) in the anterior pituitary. FS cells expressing GS were first
detected in 3-d-old rats, and this cell population, expressed as the immunostained cell area divided by a
standard unit area, increased as a function of age. The percentages of FS cells also expressing GS were 0.2,
6.4, 25 and 74% at 3 d, 30 d, 60 d and 2 y of age, respectively. GS enzyme activity also increased in
parallel with the increase of ir-GS cell population maturation. The subcutaneous injection of methionine
sulphoximine, a GS and γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase inhibitor, reduced pituitary GS activity by 83%, but
increased the population of ir-GS cells 3.5-fold in 30-d-old rats. Buthionine sulphoximine, a specific inhibitor
of γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase, had little effect on GS activity or the ir-GS cell population. Neither
methionine sulphoximine nor buthionine sulphoximine changed the population of ir-S100 protein cells (FS
cells). Dexamethasone and hydrocortisone increased the population of ir-GS cells by 3.1 and 4.2-fold,
respectively, within 12 h after administration. A significant increase of GS activity due to the injection of
glucocorticoids was observed in the anterior pituitary, but not in the brain, retina or liver of immature rats.
Adrenalectomy did not cause decrease of pituitary GS activity, and dexamethasone administration increased
GS activity in both adrenalectomised and intact rats. In the monolayer culture of anterior pituitary cells,
glucocorticoids increased GS activity by ×1.5, and methionine sulphoximine reduced the activity by over
94%. These results demonstrate that GS in folliculostellate cells is a glucocorticoid-inducible enzyme in vivo
and in vitro, and that the age-dependent increase of GS activity is independent of endogenous adrenal
glucocorticoids.