首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 797 毫秒
1.
The changes in serum gonadotrophins in male hamsters following one injection of 15 μg luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) (Group A) were compared with those following the last injection of LHRH in animals receiving an injection approximately every 12 hr for 4 days (Group B) or 12 days (Group C). Peak follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) levels (ng/ml) were 1776±218 (Group A), 2904±346 (Group B), and 4336±449 (Group C). Peak luteinizing hormone (LH) values (ng/ml) were 1352±80 (Group A), 410±12 (Group B), and 498±53 (Group C). Serum FSH:LH ratios, calculated from the concentrations measured 16 hr after the last LHRH injections, were higher in Groups B and C than in Group A. Similar injections of LHRH (100 ng or 15 μg/injection) for 6 days elevated the serum FSH:LH ratio in intact males. Five such LHRH injections (100 ng/injection) blunted the rise in serum LH in orchidectomized hamsters. Direct effects of LHRH on gonadotrophin secretory dynamics or altered brain-pituitary-testicular interactions may alter the ratio of FSH to LH in the hamster.  相似文献   

2.
Basal serum levels of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and testosterone (T) and the responsiveness of these hormones to a challenge dose of luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH), were determined in juvenile, pubertal, and adult rhesus monkeys. The monkey gonadotrophins were analyzed using RIA reagents supplied by the World Health Organization (WHO) Special Programme of Human Reproduction. The FSH levels which were near the assay sensitivity in immature monkeys (2.4 +/- 0.8 ng/ml) showed a discernible increase in pubertal animals (6.4 +/- 1.8 ng/ml). Compared to other two age groups, the serum FSH concentration was markedly higher (16.1 +/- 1.8 ng/ml) in adults. Serum LH levels were below the detectable limits of the assay in juvenile monkeys but rose to 16.2 +/- 3.1 ng/ml in pubertal animals. When compared to pubertal animals, a two-fold increase in LH levels paralleled changes in serum LH during the three developmental stages. Response of serum gonadotrophins and T levels to a challenge dose of LHRH (2.5 micrograms; i.v.) was variable in the different age groups. The present data suggest: an asynchronous rise of FSH and LH during the pubertal period and a temporal correlation between the testicular size and FSH concentrations; the challenge dose of LHRH, which induces a significant rise in serum LH and T levels, fails to elicit an FSH response in all the three age groups; and the pubertal as compared to adult monkeys release significantly larger quantities of LH in response to exogenous LHRH.  相似文献   

3.
The responsiveness of the anterior pituitary to exogenous luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH; 20 micrograms/kg body weight) and the subsequent stimulation of testosterone secretion by the testes was studied after administration of dietary aflatoxin (10 ppm) to 9-wk-old male chickens. In both control and aflatoxin-treated males, there were significant (p less than 0.05) increases in plasma luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations following LHRH administration, which peaked at 5 min post injection and declined thereafter. Plasma testosterone levels increased soon after the LHRH injection in control males, secondary to elevated LH levels in the peripheral circulation, and continued to increase throughout the experimental period. In contrast, this LH-induced elevation in plasma testosterone was delayed in aflatoxin-treated males, with no substantial increase until 20 min post-LHRH injection. In a subsequent experiment, castration of aflatoxin-fed males resulted in an altered response to exogenous LHRH, as compared to their intact counterparts. Based on these data, it appeared that while the LH-secretory capacity of the anterior pituitary was not diminished in birds receiving aflatoxin, the testicular response to exogenous LHRH was altered during aflatoxicosis. Additionally, the effect of castration on plasma LH profiles after LHRH administration provides preliminary evidence for extra-testicular effects of dietary aflatoxin on reproduction in the avian male.  相似文献   

4.
Effects of pure human follicle-stimulating hormone (hFSH) and ovine luteinizing hormone (oLH) on testicular function were investigated in long-term hypophysectomized or photoinhibited Djungarian hamsters. hFSH (5 IU) or oLH (5 micrograms) or a combination of FSH and LH (5 IU and 5 micrograms, respectively) were injected s.c. twice daily for 7 days to hypophysectomized and photoinhibited hamsters. Other photoinhibited hamsters were treated for 14 and 21 days with FSH and LH (3 IU and 3 micrograms, respectively) in a similar way. LH alone had little, if any, effect on testicular weights; FSH, when injected alone or in combination with LH (FSH/LH), caused a significant increase in testes weights at each time point. On the other hand, LH or FSH/LH, but not FSH alone, caused a significant increase in the accessory organ weights. FSH had no effect on intratesticular testosterone (T) or on 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3 beta-HSD) activity but enhanced the in vitro response of interstitial cells to hCG. LH and FSH/LH had pronounced effects on intratesticular T, 3 beta-HSD activity, and in vitro response of interstitial cells to human chorionic gonadotropin. Treatment with FSH or FSH/LH caused regrowth of the testis and restoration of tubular lumen and tubular diameter and restored complete spermatogenesis. However, LH had little effect on spermatogenesis in spite of increased intratesticular and peripheral T levels. These results indicate that although LH can cause a full redifferentiation of Leydig cells in photoinhibited hamsters, it has only minor effects on tubular function. On the other hand, FSH alone induces full restoration of tubular function in these animals and has no direct effect on Leydig cell steroidogenesis, but may enhance the Leydig cell responsiveness to LH.  相似文献   

5.
The feedback effects of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) on gonadotropin secretion in rams were investigated using DHT-implanted castrate rams (wethers) infused with intermittent pulsatile luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) for 14 days. Castration, as anticipated, reduced both serum testosterone and DHT but elevated serum LH and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). Dihydrotestosterone implants raised serum DHT in wethers to intact ram levels and blocked the LH and FSH response to castration. The secretory profile of these individuals failed to show an endogenous LH pulse during any of the scheduled blood sampling periods, but a small LH pulse was observed following a 5-ng/kg LHRH challenge injection. Dihydrotestosterone-implanted wethers given repeated LHRH injections beginning at the time of castration increased serum FSH and yielded LH pulses that were temporally coupled to exogenous LHRH administration. While the frequency of these secretory episodes was comparable to that observed for castrates, amplitudes of the induced LH pulses were blunted relative to those observed for similarly infused, testosterone-implanted castrates. Dihydrotestosterone was also shown to inhibit LH and FSH secretion and serum testosterone concentrations in intact rams. In summary, it appears that DHT may normally participate in feedback regulation of LH and FSH secretion in rams. These data suggest androgen feedback is regulated by deceleration of the hypothalamic LHRH pulse generator and direct actions at the level of the adenohypophysis.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
We have recently purified a novel pituitary polypeptide designated 7B2. By raising polyclonal antibodies to a synthetic 7B2 fragment in rabbits, we have developed a sensitive and specific radioimmunoassay for this novel polypeptide, and it has been used for the study of the release of immunoreactive 7B2 from rat anterior pituitary cells in vitro. In addition, immunocytochemical study shows that 7B2 is present in the gonadotropin cells of rat anterior pituitary. The aim of the present studies is to investigate the effect of human beta-inhibin, testosterone, and combined testosterone plus human beta-inhibin on the induced release of immunoreactive 7B2, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and luteinizing hormone (LH) in rat anterior pituitary cell culture in vitro. Our results show that both human beta-inhibin and testosterone effectively suppress the stimulatory effect of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) on immunoreactive 7B2, FSH, and LH release. The present data indicate that the regulation of secretion of 7B2 and pituitary gonadotropins may be under a similar type of feedback mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
Adult male rats injected with cadmium chloride were compared with controls with respect to serum levels of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), androgens and testicular histology. A single injection of cadmium chloride (9 mg/kg) was found to bring about no consistent short term changes in the plasma levels of FSH or LH, but after a long period the levels of both these hormones were elevated. In contrast, the levels of androgen showed a sharp increase at 6 h which declined by 12 h. In accordance with the elevated levels of gonadotropins found at 9–28 days after cadmium chloride injection, the androgen levels showed a drastic reduction. Histological aspect of the testis revealed acute necrotic changes of which the vacuolation of spermatid nuclei and fibrosis of Leydig cells are noteworthy.  相似文献   

9.
To determine what role pituitary responsiveness plays in the suppression of gonadotropin level during incubation in the turkey, the ability of the pituitary to release luteinizing hormone (LH) in response to luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) was compared in incubating, laying, and photorefractory birds. In all three groups, the i.m. injection of LHRH (4 micrograms/kg) increased serum LH levels; however, the LH response was markedly enhanced in the incubating turkeys as compared with the laying (6.6-fold increase over preinjection levels vs. 1.9-fold; p less than 0.05) or the photorefractory birds (9.7-fold vs. 3.1-fold; p less than 0.05). The LHRH-induced LH release was also determined in turkeys as they shifted from the laying to the incubating phase of the reproductive cycle. This response increased (p less than 0.05) in magnitude as the birds started to incubate. The high prolactin level of incubating turkeys does not have a depressing effect on LHRH-stimulated LH release; thus, impaired LH response to LHRH is not a mechanism involved in the diminished gonadotropin secretion of incubating turkeys.  相似文献   

10.
Adult Soay rams were infused for 21 days with 50 micrograms buserelin/day, using s.c. implanted osmotic mini-pumps. The continuous treatment with this LHRH agonist induced a supraphysiological increase in the blood concentrations of LH (15-fold) and testosterone (5-fold) followed by a decrease below pre-treatment values after 10 days. The blood concentrations of FSH showed only a minimal initial increase but the subsequent decrease was dramatic, occurring within 1 day. By Day 10 of treatment, the blood concentrations of all 3 hormones were low or declining, LH pulses were absent in the serial profiles based on 20-min blood samples and the administration of LHRH antiserum failed to affect the secretion of LH or testosterone. By Day 21, the secretion of FSH, LH and testosterone was maximally suppressed. The i.v. injection of 400 ng LHRH was totally ineffective at stimulating an increase in the blood concentrations of LH while the i.v. injection of 50 micrograms ovine LH induced a normal increase in the concentrations of testosterone; this confirmed that the chronic treatment with the LHRH agonist had desensitized the pituitary gonadotrophs without markedly affecting the responsiveness of the testicular Leydig cells. The ratio of bioactive: radioimmunoactive LH did not change during the treatment. The long-term effect of the infusion was fully reversible as shown by the increase in the blood concentrations of FSH, LH and testosterone and the return of normal pulsatile fluctuations in LH and testosterone within 7 days of the end of treatment.  相似文献   

11.
Prepubertal (28-30 days old) female rats were infused s.c. over a 60-h period with a purified porcine pituitary follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) preparation having FSH specific activity 8.4 times that of NIH-FSH-S1 and luteinizing hormone (LH) specific activity less than 0.005 times that of NIH-LH-S1, based on radioreceptor assays. When the FSH infusion rate of this preparation was increased over the range of 0.5-2 units/day (mg NIH-FSH-S1 equivalent), an all-or-none response was observed, with the threshold dose for superovulation being between 1 and 2 units/day. Eleven of twelve rats receiving the 2 units/day dose ovulated a mean +/- SEM of 67 +/- 8 oocytes on the morning of the third day after the beginning of FSH infusion. Addition of human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), as a source of LH activity, to a subthreshold (1 U/day) FSH infusion rate resulted in 20% of rats ovulating at an hCG dosage of 50 mIU/day; increasing the hCG infusion to 200 mIU/day concomitant with the subthreshold FSH infusion rate increased ovulation rate to a mean of 69 +/- 8/rat, with 100% of rats ovulating. To determine the effect of varying both FSH infusion rates and LH:FSH ratios, FSH was infused at several rates, with hCG added to give varying hCG:FSH ratios for each FSH infusion rate. Administration of hCG alone was ineffective in causing ovulation except at the highest infusion rates. Adding hCG to FSH to reach a ratio of 0.2 IU hCG/U FSH significantly increased the superovulatory response to an intermediate, 1 U/day FSH dose, but not to the low, 0.5 U/day dose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The effect of Freund's adjuvant administration on 24-hour changes of plasma prolactin, growth hormone (GH), thyrotropin (TSH), insulin, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH) and testosterone were studied in young (2 months) and aged (18 months) male Wistar rats. Rats were injected s.c. with Freund's adjuvant or adjuvant's vehicle and, 18 days later, they were killed at 6 different time intervals throughout a 24-hour cycle to measure circulating hormone levels by specific RIAs. Young rats receiving adjuvant's vehicle exhibited significant time-of-day-dependent variations in plasma TSH, LH and testosterone, with maximal levels at 1300 h, 0100 h and 1700 h, respectively. Prolactin and insulin levels, analyzed globally in a factorial ANOVA, showed significant time-of-day changes with maximal levels at 1300 - 1700 h and 2100 h, respectively. The daily rhythms in plasma LH and testosterone found in young rats were not longer observed in Freund's adjuvant-injected rats, while as far as TSH, a second peak was observed at 0100 h after Freund's adjuvant administration. Twenty-four hour rhythms in circulating TSH, LH and testosterone were blunted in old rats receiving either Freund's adjuvant or its vehicle. Aged rats exhibited significantly higher circulating levels of prolactin, and lower levels of GH, TSH, FSH and testosterone. The results indicate that secretion of prolactin, GH, TSH, FSH and testosterone are age-dependent, as are the responses of TSH, LH and testosterone to Freund's adjuvant administration.  相似文献   

13.
Both testosterone (T) and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-antagonist (GnRH-A) when given alone lower serum luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in intact and castrated rats. However, when graded doses of testosterone enanthate (T.E.) were given to GnRH-A-treated intact male rats, a paradoxical dose-dependent increase in serum FSH occurred; whereas serum LH remained suppressed. This surprising finding led us to ask whether the paradoxical increase in serum FSH in GnRH-A-suppressed animals was a direct stimulatory effect of T on the hypothalamic-pituitary axis or the result of a T effect on a testicular regulator of FSH. To test these hypotheses, we treated adult male castrated rats with GnRH-A and graded doses of T.E. In both intact and castrated rats, serum LH remained undetectable in GnRH-A-treated rats with or without T.E. However, addition of T.E. to GnRH-A led to a dose-dependent increase in serum FSH in castrated animals as well, thus pointing against mediation by a selective testicular regulator of FSH. These data provide evidence that pituitary LH and FSH responses may be differentially regulated under certain conditions. When the action of GnRH is blocked (such as in GnRH-A-treated animals), T directly and selectively increases pituitary FSH secretion.  相似文献   

14.
Two experiments were conducted to examine the effects of mouse epidermal growth factor (EGF) on the concentrations of testosterone, LH and FSH in jugular blood plasma and on the pituitary responsiveness to LHRH. In 20 rams treated with subcutaneous doses of EGF at rates of 85, 98 or 113 micrograms/kg fleece-free body weight, mean plasma LH and testosterone concentrations were significantly reduced (P less than 0.05) at 6 h after treatment but not at 24 h. EGF treatment at 130 micrograms/kg fleece-free body weight suppressed the plasma content of these hormones for up to 48 h. Mean plasma FSH concentrations decreased significantly (P less than 0.05) for up to 48 h after EGF treatment, the effect being most pronounced in rams with mean pretreatment FSH values greater than or equal to 0.5 ng/ml. Intravenous injections of 1.0 micrograms LHRH given to each of 5 rams before and at 6 h, 24 h and 72 h after EGF treatment produced LH and testosterone release patterns which paralleled those obtained in 5 control rams similarly treated with LHRH. These results suggest that, in rams, depilatory doses of mouse EGF temporarily impair gonadotrophin and androgen secretion by inhibiting LHRH release from the hypothalamus. Such treatment appears to have no effect on the responsiveness of the pituitary to LHRH.  相似文献   

15.
Pubertal and young adult male rats release more luteinizing hormone (LH) in response to luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) if pretreated with LHRH than if pretreated with saline. Immature male rats do not show this self-priming effect. In order to examine the role of acute changes in testicular steroids in this process, immature (29-30 days old) or pubertal (50-51 days old) male rats were castrated or sham operated under ketamine HCl anesthesia. Beginning immediately after completion of the surgery, they were given three priming injections of 10 ng LHRH/100 g body wt or saline at 30-min intervals. Thirty minutes after the third priming injection, a blood sample was obtained by cardiac puncture followed immediately by a challenge injection of 50 ng LHRH/100 g body wt given to both saline and LHRH primed groups. Ten minutes after the challenge injection a final blood sample was obtained by heart puncture. Serum was assayed for LH concentration by radioimmunoassay. Sham-operated pubertal rats showed a typical self-priming effect. Animals pretreated with LHRH released significantly (P less than 0.01) more LH in response to the challenge injection than did rats pretreated with saline. Acute castration also resulted in a significant (P less than 0.001) self-priming effect in pubertal rats. As anticipated, sham castrated immature males did not show a self-priming effect. Acutely castrated immature rats however, showed a significant (P less than 0.05) self-priming effect. These data provide support for the hypothesis that, prior to puberty, increases in testosterone during the priming process inhibit the expression of the self-priming effect.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of castration and of administration of charcoal-treated porcine follicular fluid (pFF) containing inhibin-like activity on plasma concentration of gonadotropic hormones was studied in neonatal pigs. Plasma follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentration averaged 25.1 +/- 1.5 ng/ml (mean +/- SEM) in 1-wk-old females and gradually declined to 20.2 +/- 0.7 ng/ml 6 wk later. Ovariectomy did not significantly influence plasma FSH concentration. In males, concentration averaged 8.0 +/- 0.7 ng/ml before castration but rose significantly within 2 days after castration. Injection of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) did not influence plasma FSH concentrations in intact males, but did in females and in 7-wk-old males castrated at 1 wk. Plasma luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations in 1-wk-old females (2.2 +/- 0.4 ng/ml) gradually declined and were not influenced by castration. Concentrations of plasma LH in 1-wk-old male piglets (2.8 +/- 0.7 ng/ml) were not significantly influenced by castration within 2 days but were significantly higher 6 wk later. LHRH induced a significant rise in plasma LH concentrations in all animals. Injection of pFF resulted in a decline of plasma FSH concentrations in intact and castrated males and in intact females, but did not influence plasma LH concentrations. These data demonstrate a sex-specific difference in the control of plasma FSH, but not in plasma LH concentration in the neonatal pig. Plasma FSH concentrations, but not plasma LH concentrations, are suppressed by testicular hormones in 1-wk-old piglets. Plasma FSH concentrations can be suppressed in both neonatal male and female pigs by injections of pFF.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of changes in pulse frequency of exogenously infused gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) were investigated in 6 adult surgically hypothalamo/pituitary-disconnected (HPD) gonadal-intact rams. Ten-minute sampling in 16 normal animals prior to HPD showed endogenous luteinizing hormone (LH) pulses occurring every 2.3 h with a mean pulse amplitude of 1.11 +/- 0.06 (SEM) ng/ml. Mean testosterone and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentrations were 3.0 +/- 0.14 ng/ml and 0.85 +/- 0.10 ng/ml, respectively. Before HPD, increasing single doses of GnRH (50-500 ng) elicited a dose-dependent rise of LH, 50 ng producing a response of similar amplitude to those of spontaneous LH pulses. The effects of varying the pulse frequency of a 100-ng GnRH dose weekly was investigated in 6 HPD animals; the pulse intervals explored were those at 1, 2, and 4 h. The pulsatile GnRH treatment was commenced 2-6 days after HPD when plasma testosterone concentrations were in the castrate range (less than 0.5 ng/ml) in all animals. Pulsatile LH and testosterone secretion was reestablished in all animals in the first 7 days by 2-h GnRH pulses, but the maximal pulse amplitudes of both hormones were only 50 and 62%, respectively, of endogenous pulses in the pre-HPD state. The plasma FSH pattern was nonpulsatile and FSH concentrations gradually increased in the first 7 days, although not to the pre-HPD range. Increasing GnRH pulse frequency from 2- to 1-hour immediately increased the LH baseline and pulse amplitude. As testosterone concentrations increased, the LH responses declined in a reciprocal fashion between Days 2 and 7. FSH concentration decreased gradually over the 7 days at the 1-h pulse frequency. Slowing the GnRH pulse to a 4-h frequency produced a progressive fall in testosterone concentrations, even though LH baselines were unchanged and LH pulse amplitudes increased transiently. FSH concentrations were unaltered during the 4-h regime. These results show that 1) the pulsatile pattern of LH and testosterone secretion in HPD rams can be reestablished by exogenous GnRH, 2) the magnitude of LH, FSH, and testosterone secretion were not fully restored to pre-HPD levels by the GnRH dose of 100 ng per pulse, and 3) changes in GnRH pulse frequency alone can influence both gonadotropin and testosterone secretion in the HPD model.  相似文献   

18.
Sequential bleeding and push-pull perfusion of the hypothalamus were used to characterize luteinizing hormone (LH) and LH-releasing hormone (LHRH) release in ovariectomized (OVX) ewes after injection of corn oil or estradiol benzoate (EB). Push-pull cannulae were surgically implanted into the stalk median eminences of 24 OVX ewes. Seven to 14 days later each of 20 animals was given an i.m. injection of 50 micrograms EB. Blood samples and push-pull perfusate were collected at 10-min intervals for 6-12 h beginning 12-15 h after EB injection. Four OVX ewes were given i.m. injections of corn oil 7 days after implantation of push-pull cannulae. Blood samples and push-pull perfusate were collected at 10-min intervals for 4 h between 18 and 22 h after injection of corn oil. Luteinizing hormone remained below 2 ng/ml throughout most of the sampling periods in 9 of 20 EB-treated ewes. In 5 of these 9 LHRH also was undetectable, whereas in 4 LHRH was detectable (1.84 +/- 0.29 pg/10 min), but did not increase with time. Preovulatory-like surges of LH occurred in 11 EB-treated ewes, but LHRH was undetectable in 5. In 4 of 6 ewes showing LH surges and detectable LHRH, sampling occurred during the onset of the LH surge.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
During aging, the male Japanese quail exhibits a loss of fertility, increased morphological abnormalities in the testes, and a higher incidence of Sertoli cell tumors. Although there is a coincident loss of reproductive behavior, plasma androgen levels remain high until testicular regression occurs in association with senescence. The purpose of this study was to compare mean specific binding of chicken luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) as a measure of testicular receptors during identified stages during aging. Males were categorized according to age (young = 9 months, middle aged = 24 months, or old = 36+ months) and sexual behavior (active or inactive). Testicular samples were collected immediately after perfusion with 4% paraformaldehyde from the following groups: young active (n = 8), young photoregressed (n = 5), young photoregressed plus testosterone implant (n = 4), middle-aged active (n = 8), middle-aged inactive (n = 4), old inactive (n = 5), and old inactive plus testosterone implant (n = 6). A crude plasma membrane fraction was prepared from the testes of each bird and an aliquot deriving from 10 mg of testicular tissue was used for binding assay. Specific binding of labeled LH or FSH was expressed as percentage of total radioactive hormone. Results showed significant (P < 0.05) age-related decreases in both FSH and LH receptor numbers. The highest FSH binding was found in young and middle-aged active males, with low binding in old inactive males. Testicular LH binding decreased during aging, with a sharp decrease in middle-aged males, which was similar to old males. Testosterone implants weakly stimulated FSH and LH binding in old males. Both LH and FSH binding decreased in photoregressed young males. However, testosterone implants stimulated increased LH binding, but did not affect FSH binding in young photoregressed males. These results provide evidence for separate regulation of testicular LH and FSH receptors, with testosterone stimulation of LH receptor, but not FSH receptor number in young males. However, during aging there appears to be a loss of this response, potentially because of the reduced efficacy of testosterone stimulation, thereby implying a diminished capacity for response with aging.  相似文献   

20.
Mature rams of Polled Dorset, Finnish Landrace, Rambouillet and Suffolk breeding were maintained in a temperature-controlled environment and exposed to two consecutive cycles of short (8L:16D) followed by long (16L:8D) days. Serum hormone concentrations were determined in weekly samples and in 24-h profiles characterized at the end of each lighting schedule (i.e., 12, 24, 36 and 48 weeks). In all four breeds, the pituitary-testicular axis was more active during short days as compared with long days and the magnitudes of changes in serum luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and testosterone concentrations were greater for the two most seasonal breeds, Finnish Landrace and Suffolks. In comparison to other breeds, Finnish Landrace rams had significantly (P less than 0.05) higher mean LH levels, showed the greatest number of LH peaks/24 h, and had the highest mean testosterone levels at the end of both periods of short days, while Rambouillet rams had significantly (P less than 0.05) lower testosterone. Rambouillets also showed the smallest changes in pulsatile LH and testosterone secretion and displayed the least number of LH peaks/24 h following short days. Serum FSH levels were significantly (P less than 0.05) higher in Finnish Landrace and Suffolk rams than in Polled Dorsets and Rambouillets after 12 weeks of short days. Breed differences in serum LH, FSH and testosterone were not apparent following long days. Prolactin levels in Rambouillet rams were significantly (P less than 0.05) lower than in the other breeds following both periods of long days. These results indicate that breed differences exist in mature rams with regard to hormone secretory profiles. Breed differences in serum gonadotropin and testosterone are only apparent during short days when the hypothalamo-pituitary-testicular axis in rams is considered most active. Likewise, breed differences in prolactin are noticeable only during long days when secretion of this hormone is enhanced. Breed differences in LH, FSH and testosterone secretion in rams during short days might be related to seasonality of mating and/or fecundity of breed types.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号