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1.
The effects of thymulin and GnRH on FSH and LH release were studied in suspension cultures of anterior pituitary cells from female adult rats sacrificed on each day of the estrous cycle. The spontaneous release of gonadotropins by pituitaries, as well as their response to GnRH or thymulin addition, fluctuated during the estrous cycle. Adding thymulin to pituitary cells from rats in diestrus 1 increased the concentration of FSH; while in cells from rats in estrus, FSH level decreased. Thymulin had a stimulatory effect on the basal concentration of LH during most days of the estrous cycle. Adding GnRH increased FSH release in cells from rats in diestrus 1, diestrus 2, or proestrus, and resulted in higher LH levels in cells obtained from rats in all days of the estrous cycle. Compared to the GnRH treatment, the simultaneous addition of thymulin and GnRH to cells from rats in diestrus 1, diestrus 2, or proestrus resulted in lower FSH concentrations. Similar results were observed in the LH release by cells from rats in diestrus 1, while in cells from rats in proestrus or estrus, LH concentrations increased. A directly proportional relation between progesterone serum levels and the effects of thymulin on FSH release was observed. These data suggest that thymulin plays a dual role in the release of gonadotropins, and that its effects depend on the hormonal status of the donor's pituitary.  相似文献   

2.
Acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC) is known to affect several aspects of neuronal activity. To evaluate the neuroendocrine actions of this compound, several endocrinological parameters were followed in ALC-treated and control animals during recovery from dark-induced anestrus. In treated animals, serum luteinizing hormone (LH) and prolactin levels were higher than those of controls during the proestrous and estrous phases of the cycle, and serum estradiol levels were higher during estrus. No significant changes were observed in serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone and progesterone. Uterine weight was increased in ALC-treated rats during proestrus and estrus, but not in diestrus. The basal release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) from perifused hypothalamic slices of ALC-treated animals was elevated at proestrus and diestrus, and GnRH release elicited by high K+ was higher during all three phases of the cycle. The basal release of LH from perifused pituitaries of treated animals was elevated in diestrus, and the LH response to GnRH was higher in estrus and diestrus I. Depolarization with K+ caused increased LH secretion during proestrus and estrus in treated animals. In contrast to these effects of ALC treatment in vivo, no direct effects of ALC were observed during short- or long-term treatment of cultured pituitary cells. These results indicate that ALC treatment influences hypothalamo-pituitary function in a cycle stage-dependent manner, and increases the secretory activity of gonadotrophs and lactotrophs. Since no effects of ALC on basal and agonist-induced secretory responses of gonadotrophs were observed in vitro, it is probable that its effects on gonadotropin release are related to enhancement of GnRH neuronal function in the hypothalamus.  相似文献   

3.
The gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) binding capacity in ovaries and pituitaries of normal cycling rats at different stages of the estrous cycle and in ovaries of persistent-estrus rats was measured using radioligand-receptor assay (RRA). Persistent estrus was induced either by neonatal administration of testosterone propionate (1.25 mg s.c.) on the second day of life or by a hypothalamic suprachiasmatic frontal cut made with Halász' knife. All animals were killed during the critical period (1400-1600 h), and GnRH receptor was assayed. GnRH receptor levels in both ovaries and pituitaries changed during the estrous cycle. The total number of ovarian GnRH binding sites was significantly higher in proestrus than in diestrus 1, the stage in which the lowest level was found. When binding sites were expressed in fmol/mg ovary, the highest level was observed in diestrus 2; however, no changes were observed during the estrous cycle when GnRH binding sites were expressed as fmol/mg protein. Changes noted were very similar to those demonstrated in pituitary GnRH receptors in our present and previous experiments. Higher levels of pituitary binding sites were found in diestrus 2 and proestrus than in estrus and diestrus 1. The changes in the GnRH receptor levels were more striking in the pituitary than in the ovaries. It appears that the total number of ovarian GnRH binding sites was not altered in either of the two persistent-estrus groups, but that their concentration was significantly higher (expressed in fmol/mg ovary or fmol/mg protein) than on any day during the estrous cycle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
A single injection of estradiol valerate (EV) to adult female rats induces a persistent anovulatory polycystic ovarian (PCO) condition. During the 8-20-wk interval following EV treatment, this condition is associated with a selective compromise of LH release, decreased pituitary content of LH, and decreased GnRH-stimulated LH secretion. A marked increase in mean plasma concentrations of LH and enhanced LH response to GnRH occur after 20 wk post-EV treatment. Despite this apparent improvement, the PCO condition remains unchanged. The present study was undertaken to elucidate the underlying causes for these spontaneous improvements in LH parameters. We reasoned that these changes may be the result of alterations in 1) pituitary GnRH receptor levels; or 2) the mode of LH secretion, i.e. GnRH-dependent versus GnRH-independent; or 3) post-GnRH receptor events. Hence, we assessed pituitary GnRH receptor concentration as well as the pituitary content of LH and FSH in rats with PCO of 9 wk and 22 wk duration. To examine the possibility of a change in the mode of LH secretion, we examined the effects of in vivo suppression of LH secretion by treatment with a GnRH antagonist [N-Ac-D-Nal1, D-Phe2,3, D-Arg6, Phe7, D-Ala10]-GnRH (GnRH-ANTAG) in the same groups of animals. Mean pituitary weights were greater in the 9-wk-PCO than in the 22-wk-PCO animals. The pituitary concentration of GnRH receptors (on either a weight or milligram pituitary-membrane protein basis) was similar in the 9-wk- and 22-wk-PCO animals. Pituitary LH and FSH contents, however, were significantly higher (5-fold and 2-fold, respectively) in 22-wk-PCO rats compared to the 9-wk-PCO animals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The effects of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), beta-endorphin and its antagonist naloxone on the expression of luteinizing hormone (LH) subunit genes and LH secretion were examined in ovariectomized and/or cycling female rats through their direct microinjection into the third cerebral ventricle, in the proximity of the hypothalamus-pituitary complex. GnRH (1 nM) induced a significant augmentation of the pituitary content of alpha mRNA when administered 15, 30 or 60 min intervals over 5 h to ovariectomized rats whereas only the 30 and 60 min intervals were effective in increasing LHbeta mRNA, and the 60 min intervals for LH release. This was in agreement with the established concept of a pulse-dependent regulation of gonadotropin synthesis and release. Hourly pulses of GnRH also increased alpha and LHbeta mRNA levels when microinjected in female cycling rats during proestrus or diestrus II. Using this model we observed a marked negative influence of hourly intracerebral microinjections of beta-endorphin on LH mRNA content and LH release in ovariectomized rats while naloxone had no effect. This suggests that endogenous beta-endorphin was unable to exert its negative action on beta-endorphin receptors that were present and responded to the ligand. The present approach would be valuable for the exploration of the mechanisms of action of beta-endorphin or other substances on the functions of the gonadotrophs.  相似文献   

6.
These studies examined whether the decrease in pituitary responsiveness to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) observed during lactation in the rat results from a change in pituitary GnRH receptors. GnRH binding capacity was determined by saturation analysis using D-Ala6 as both ligand and tracer. During the estrous cycle, the number of GnRH binding sites increased from 199 +/- 38 fmol/mg protein on estrus to 527 +/- 31 fmol/mg protein on the morning of proestrus, whereas there was no change in receptor affinity (Ka, 6-10 X 10(9) M-1), During lactation, females nursing 8 pups on Days 5 or 10 postpartum had 50% fewer GnRH receptors (109-120 fmol/mg protein) than observed during estrus or diestrus 1 (199-242 fmol/mg protein) although receptor affinity was similar among all the groups. No deficits in pituitary GnRH receptors were observed in females nursing 2 pups on Day 10 postpartum. Removal of the 8-pup suckling stimulus for 24 or 48 h resulted in a dramatic increase in GnRH receptor capacity by 24 h from 120 +/- 16 to 355 +/- 39 fmol/mg protein. The rise in GnRH receptors after pup removal was accompanied by an increase in serum luteinizing hormone (LH) and estradiol concentrations. To assess the role of ovarian steroids in determining GnRH receptor capacity during lactation, females were ovariectomized (OVX) on Day 2 postpartum. Suckling of a large litter (8 pups) completely blocked the postcastration rise in serum LH and in pituitary GnRH receptors on Day 10 postpartum (OVX+ 8, 77 +/- 12 fmol/mg protein; OVX+ 0, 442 +/- 38 fmol/mg protein).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) has been found in the gonadotrophs and folliculo-stellate cells of the anterior pituitary. Previous observations from our laboratory suggest that NO may play a role in regulating gonadotropin secretion. Because estrogen secretion by the ovary can influence gonadotropin secretion, we investigated the hypothesis that chronic in vivo NO deficiency has a direct estrogen-independent effect on luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion. Chronic NO deficiency was induced by adding an NOS inhibitor, N-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA, 0.6 g/l) to the drinking water of ovariectomized (OVX) rats. The control OVX rats were untreated. After 6-8 weeks, the animals were sacrificed, and the pituitaries were removed and perfused continuously for 4 hr in the presence of pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH, 500 ng/pulse) every 30 min. S-Nitroso-L-acetyl penicillamine (SNAP, an NO donor, 0.1 mM) or L-nitro-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, an NOS inhibitor, 0.1 mM) was added to the media and perfusate samples were collected at 10-min intervals. GnRH-stimulated LH and FSH levels were significantly lower in pituitaries from OVX/NO-deficient pituitaries compared with pituitaries from the OVX control group. The addition of SNAP significantly decreased LH and FSH secretion by pituitaries from OVX control animals, but significantly increased their secretion by pituitaries from the OVX/NO-deficient animals. L-NAME also suppressed LH and FSH secretion by pituitaries from the OVX control animals and stimulated their release by pituitaries from the NO-deficient/OVX animals. Immunohistochemistry of frontal sections through the hypothalamus demonstrated that OVX/NO deficiency is associated with increased GnRH in the median eminence. We conclude that NO has a chronic stimulatory effect on LH and FSH release and the subsequent altered secretory responsiveness to NO agonist or antagonist is the result of chronic NO suppression.  相似文献   

8.
This paper further substantiates the physiological role of beta-endorphin (beta-END) in the control of the cyclic LH secretion and provides new data on the interactions between 17 beta-estradiol (17 beta-E2) and beta-END at both the hypothalamic and pituitary levels. At the hypothalamic level, during the estrous cycle in rats, beta-END concentrations were highest on diestrus I in the arcuate nucleus, median preoptic area and median eminence and lowest at the time of the preovulatory 17 beta-E2 surge on proestrus, before the subsequent preovulatory hypothalamic GnRH and plasma LH surges. Data obtained in ovariectomized 17 beta-E2-treated ewes support the direct involvement of 17 beta-E2 in changes in beta-END and GnRH concentrations in these hypothalamic areas. At the anterior pituitary level, in vitro results obtained using anterior pituitaries from the proestrus morning cycling female rat have shown that 17 beta-E2 strongly suppresses beta-END secretion and that GnRH stimulates the release of beta-END. Furthermore, marked fluctuations were observed for plasma beta-END throughout the menstrual cycle in the woman. Low beta-END concentrations were observed in the period preceding the LH preovulatory surge. Taken together, these results show that: (1) decreases in hypothalamic beta-END concentrations, which are controlled at least by circulating levels of 17 beta-E2, modulate GnRH synthesis and/or release and contribute to the mechanisms which initiate the LH surge; (2) anterior pituitary beta-END might be involved in the mechanisms which terminate the LH surge.  相似文献   

9.
It is known that acute ovariectomy (OVX) greatly attenuates the pituitary luteinizing hormone (LH) response to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in vitro. The present study evaluated possible quantitative and/or qualitative differences in the biosynthesis and secretion of LH in pituitaries from proestrous and acutely (72 h) OVX rats. Paired anterior pituitary glands were incubated for 4 h in a medium containing +/- 10 nM GnRH. Pituitary and secreted LH were measured by radioimmunoassay with differences in total LH (tissue plus medium) +/- GnRH being indicative of GnRH-stimulated LH synthesis. Qualitative changes in LH were evaluated by isoelectrofocusing (IEF). The results show that the major form of LH stored in and released from the pituitaries consisted of LH molecules with an isoelectric point (pI) in the alkaline pH range (alkaline LH), and a lesser amount (approximately 30%) of LH molecules in the acidic pH range (acidic LH). The ratio of alkaline/acidic LH observed in the pituitary and medium was similar in the proestrous and OVX groups, although the amount of alkaline and acidic LH release in response to GnRH was 2-3 times greater in the proestrous group. In both groups, the alkaline/acidic LH ratio of secreted LH was higher in the presence of GnRH than in its absence. Alkaline LH synthesis was increased by GnRH in both groups, with the response being greater in the proestrous than in the OVX group; GnRH-stimulated acidic LH synthesis was observed only in the proestrous group. In both groups, the amount of LH synthesized was about 60% of the amount released, which suggests that LH synthesis does not fully account for differences in GnRH-stimulated LH release. Treatment of pituitary extracts with neuraminidase decreased acidic LH, and proportionately increased alkaline LH. These results suggest that the quality of LH stored in and secreted from pituitaries of proestrous and OVX rats is similar, and that there is a preferential release of the major alkaline LH isoform in response to GnRH. The ovarian steroid environment, presumably estradiol, proportionately increases the amount of alkaline and acidic LH released, and differentially affects the amounts of the various isoforms synthesized in response to GnRH. The charge heterogeneity of alkaline and acidic LH may be related to the sialic acid content of the LH molecule.  相似文献   

10.
The present experiments were designed to study the interaction between estradiol benzoate (EB) and thyroxine (T4) given in vivo on the responsiveness of pituitary luteinizing hormone (LH) to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and the release of GnRH in vitro. Ovariectomized-thyroidectomized (Ovx-Tx) rats were injected s.c. with saline or T4 (2 micrograms/100 g b.wt), and oil or EB (0.1 microgram) once daily for 40 days following a 2 x 2 factorial design. All animals were then decapitated and blood samples were collected. Anterior pituitaries (APs) were incubated in vitro with and without 0.1 ng GnRH at 37 degrees C for 4 h. Mediobasal hypothalami (MBHs) were excised and then incubated with and without APs from Ovx donor rats. Concentrations of LH and GnRH in the medium and that of LH in the serum were measured by radioimmunoassay. The LH level in media containing MBHs and donor APs was used as the index of bioactive GnRH release. In Ovx-Tx rats, T4 injections reduced the serum LH concentration, the pituitary LH response to GnRH, and the bioactive as well as the immunoreactive GnRH release. The serum LH levels and the spontaneous as well as the GnRH-stimulated release of LH in vitro were suppressed in Ovx-Tx rats following administration of EB. By contrast, the serum LH concentration, as well as pituitary LH response to GnRH and GnRH release in vitro, were higher in the group treated with both T4 and EB than in that treated with saline and EB. These results suggest that the differential changes in the LH secretion after thyroidectomy of Ovx versus non-Ovx rats are due to an antagonistic effect between T4 and estrogen on the response of pituitary LH to GnRH, and the release of GnRH.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE : The aim of the present report was to determine the possible modifications in rat pituitary LH isoforms induced by the spontaneous increase in GnRH at the time of the preovulatory gonadotropin surge. DESIGN: The changes in the quantitative pattern and relative proportions of pituitary LH isoforms in rats on the afternoon of proestrus [INT-P(PM)] were evaluated by comparison with other stages of the estrous cycle (diestrus-1, diestrus-2 and estrus) and ovariectomized (7 and 30 days earlier) animals killed in the morning and in the afternoon of the corresponding day. METHODS: The chromatofocusing technique (pH gradient 11.00-7.00) was used to analyze the different molecular species of intrapituitary LH. RESULTS: Pituitary LH from diestrus-1 animals, considered as a baseline pattern in the cycling rat, eluted as 11 isoforms distributed in pH 9.62-8.82, with greater percentages in pH 9.50-9.01. Except for INT-P(PM) pituitaries, there were no major differences in the pattern of LH heterogeneity in the pituitaries of rats from various stages of the cycle. In contrast, significant changes in the charge distribution and relative abundance of LH isoforms were found in the pituitaries from INT-P(PM) rats. INT-P(PM) pituitaries resolved in 16 LH isoforms with a significant shift to less alkaline pIs (pH 9.62-8.11), the more abundant being focused within pH 9.00-8.51. Conversely, a shift to more basic isoforms resulted after ovariectomy, leading to the accumulation of less mature isoforms in the gonadotrope. CONCLUSIONS: Presumably, the use of animals on INT-P(PM), at the time of the preovulatory LH surge, made it possible to discriminate such changes in LH isoform distribution. That GnRH, released in association with the rising phase of the LH surge, induces these changes in pituitary LH polymorphism appears to be the most likely possibility. In a previous study we demonstrated that GnRH stimulated galactose incorporation into LH in vitro. In the case of pituitaries from INT-P(PM) rats, the shift toward less alkaline isoforms could potentially result from sialylation of increased terminal galactose.  相似文献   

12.
Experiments were conducted to determine the effects of acute hyperprolactinemia (hyperPRL) on the control of luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone secretion in male rats. Exposure to elevated levels of prolactin from the time of castration (1 mg ovine prolactin 2 X daily) greatly attenuated the post-castration rise in LH observed 3 days after castration. By 7 days after castration, LH concentrations in the prolactin-treated animals approached the levels observed in control animals. HyperPRL had no effect on the postcastration rise in FSH. Pituitary responsiveness to gonadotropin hormone-releasing hormone (GnRH), as assessed by LH responses to an i.v. bolus of 25 ng GnRH, was only minimally effected by hperPRL at 3 and 7 days postcastration. LH responses were similar at all time points after GnRH in control and prolactin-treated animals, except for the peak LH responses, which were significantly smaller in the prolactin-treated animals. The effects of hyperPRL were examined further by exposing hemipituitaries in vitro from male rats to 6-min pulses of GnRH (5 ng/ml) every 30 min for 4 h. HyperPRL had no effect on basal LH release in vitro, on GnRH-stimulated LH release, or on pituitary LH concentrations in hemipituitaries from animals that were intact, 3 days postcastration, or 7 days postcastration. However, net GnRH-stimulated release of FSH was significantly higher by pituitaries from hyperprolactinemic, castrated males. To assess indirectly the effects of hyperPRL on GnRH release, males were subjected to electrical stimulation of the arcuate nucleus/median eminence (ARC/ME) 3 days postcastration. The presence of elevated levels of prolactin not only suppressed basal LH secretion but reduced the LH responses to electrical stimulation by 50% when compared to the LH responses in control castrated males. These results suggest that acute hyperPRL suppresses LH secretion but not FSH secretion. Although pituitary responsiveness is somewhat attenuated in hyperprolactinemic males, as assessed in vivo, it is normal when pituitaries are exposed to adequate amounts of GnRH in vitro. Thus, the effects of hyperPRL on pituitary responsiveness appear to be minimal, especially if the pituitary is exposed to an adequate GnRH stimulus. The suppression of basal LH secretion in vivo most likely reflects inadequate endogenous GnRH secretion. The greatly reduced LH responses after electrical stimulation in hyperprolactinemic males exposed to prolactin suggest further that hyperPRL suppresses GnRH secretion.  相似文献   

13.
K Ryu  J A Williams  R V Gallo 《Life sciences》1980,27(12):1083-1087
Incubation of anterior pituitaries from ovariectomized rats with LHRH and various concentrations of dopamine, norepinephrine or serotonin indicated that none of these neurotransmitters could decrease pituitary LH secretion in response to the releasing hormone. This indicated that the inhibitions of pulsatile LH release previously observed in our laboratory in ovariectomized rats in response to intraventricularly administered catecholamines or stimulation of brain serotoninergic neurons are due to central rather than pituitary effects of these transmitters.  相似文献   

14.
15.
M E Apfelbaum 《Life sciences》1987,41(17):2069-2076
The effect of serotonin (5-HT) on the basal and gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-stimulated release of luteinizing hormone (LH) was studied in rat adenohypophysis in vitro. Anterior pituitary glands from ovariectomized rats were incubated for 1h in the presence of different doses of 5-HT (0.01 to 3 mumol/l). Serotonin added to the culture medium slightly dimished the basal release of LH and markedly inhibited the release of LH induced by GnRH. Responsiveness to GnRH (3 nmol/l) was significantly reduced, in a dose-dependent manner, by the simultaneous treatment of glands with 5-HT. Maximal inhibition to 65% of the response obtained with GnRH alone, was attained with 1 mumol/l 5-HT. The EC50 value was estimated to be about 1.9 X 10(-7) M. The inhibitory effect of 5-HT was evident within 30 min of incubation. Furthermore, 5-HT appear to exert a short-lasting action, since the rate of basal and GnRH-induced release of LH was reduced during the first hour of incubation, but after 2h the suppressive effects of 5-HT were no longer apparent. Methysergide, a serotonin receptor blocking agent, partially antagonized the inhibitory effect of 5-HT on LH release, either basal or GnRH-stimulated. This suggests that a receptor-mediated component may be involved in the mechanism of 5-HT action. The present results indicate that 5-HT can affect the release of LH by acting directly at the pituitary gland level.  相似文献   

16.
17.
G A Bourne  S Das  N W Fahmy 《FEBS letters》1989,247(1):159-162
Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) was used to determine whether the PMA-induced extracellular Ca2+-independent release of LH was dependent on sex, estradiol and de novo protein synthesis. Infusions of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) or PMA in a perifusion system stimulated a partial secretion of LH from diestrous II and ovariectomized + estradiol-treated female pituitaries (responses inhibited by cycloheximide). In contrast, PMA was ineffective in stimulating PRL secretion from these pituitaries, as well as LH secretion from male or ovariectomized female pituitaries. These results indicate that the PMA-stimulated extracellular Ca2+-independent secretion of LH is a specific process which is dependent on sex, estradiol and de novo protein synthesis, and mimics the characteristics of the GnRH-stimulated responses.  相似文献   

18.
This career retrospective describes how the initial work on the mechanism of hormone action provided the tools for the study of hirsutism, virilism, and polycystic ovarian disease. After excessive ovarian and or adrenal androgen secretion in polycystic ovarian disease had been established, the question whether the disease was genetic or acquired, methods to manage hirsutism and methods for the induction of ovulation were addressed. Recognizing that steroid gonadotropin feedback was an important regulatory factor, initial studies were done on the secretion of LH and FSH in the ovulatory cycle. This was followed by the study of basic mechanisms of steroid-gonadotropin feedback system, using castration and steroid replacement and the events surrounding the natural onset of puberty. Studies in ovariectomized rats showed that progesterone was a pivotal enhancer of estrogen-induced gonadotropin release, thus accounting for the preovulatory gonadotropin surge. The effects of progesterone were manifested by depletion of the occupied estrogen receptors of the anterior pituitary, release of hypothalamic LHRH, and inhibition of enzymes that degrade LHRH. Progesterone also promoted the synthesis of FSH in the pituitary. The 3α,5α-reduced metabolite of progesterone brought about selective LH release and acted using the GABA(A) receptor system. The 5α-reduced metabolite of progesterone brought about selective FSH release; the ability of progesterone to bring about FSH release was dependent on its 5α-reduction. The GnRH neuron does not have steroid receptors; the steroid effect was shown to be mediated through the excitatory amino acid glutamate, which in turn stimulated nitric oxide. These observations led to the replacement of the long-accepted belief that ovarian steroids acted directly on the GnRH neuron by the novel concept that the steroid feedback effect was exerted at the glutamatergic neuron, which in turn regulated the GnRH neuron. The neuroprotective effects of estrogens on brain neurons are of considerable interest.  相似文献   

19.
The capability of estradiol (E2) or E2 and progesterone (P4) in inducing luteinizing hormone (LH) surge in acutely ovariectomized (Ovx) rats was studied. In group I, rats were Ovx on estrus and were implanted with E2 capsules and atrial cannulae immediately after operation for blood samplings. In group II, rats were also Ovx on estrus but were implanted with E2 capsules and sampling cannulae the next day (the expected diestrus day 1, D1). In group III, rats were Ovx on D1, and were implanted E2 with capsules and atrial cannulae immediately after operation. All surgical operations were done around 1000h in the morning. On the expected diestrus day 2(D2) at 0930h, one half of the rats in each group received an oil vehicle or 2mg of P4 subcutaneously. Blood samples were taken from the indwelled cannulae at 1300, 1500, and 1700hrs in the afternoon. Results showed that P4 treatment amplified LH release in all three groups of rats primed with E2, and that the oil vehicle did not assist in LH release in E2 primed rats of group I and group II, but it did in 8 out of 10 rats in group III in the late afternoon of D2. Results suggested that the estradiol alone was capable in inducing LH surge on the expected D2 afternoon, and that under estradiol-primed conditions, P4 can trigger neural initiators to advance LH surge, but that the internal hormonal milieu at the time of ovariectomy may affect the influence of ovarian steroids in inducing LH release.  相似文献   

20.
An ultrastructural study of the anterior pituitaries of cycling rats reveals changes in the ultrastructure of the gonadotrophs during the afternoon of proestrus when the release of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) is high. The rough endoplasmic reticulum cisternae become greatly dilated, forming extensive channels which are continuous with the perivascular space and provide an increased surface for the release of hormones. Granules and cytoplasmic islands of granules are seen in these spaces. Such changes are not observed during diestrus and early proestrus when the release of FSH/LH is low. The data indicate that intracisternal granule formation is an important mechanism by which anterior pituitary cells respond to increased hormonal requirements.  相似文献   

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