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1.
The inhibitory effects of the potent GnRH antagonist, [Ac-D-pCl-Phe1,2,D-Trp3,D-Arg6,DAla10]GnRH (GnRHant) upon pituitary-gonadal function were investigated in normal and castrated male rats. The antagonist was given a single subcutaneous (s.c.) injections of 1-500 micrograms to 40-60 day old rats which were killed from 1 to 7 days later for assay of pituitary GnRH receptors, gonadal receptors for LH, FSH, and PRL, and plasma gonadotropins, PRL, and testosterone (T). In intact rats treated with low doses of the antagonist (1, 5 or 10 micrograms), available pituitary GnRH receptors were reduced to 40, 30 and 15% of the control values, respectively, with no change in serum gonadotropin, PRL, and T levels. Higher antagonist doses (50, 100 or 500 micrograms) caused more marked decreases in free GnRH receptors, to 8, 4 and 1% of the control values, which were accompanied by dose-related reductions in serum LH and T concentrations. After the highest dose of GnRHant (500 micrograms), serum LH and T levels were completely suppressed at 24 h, and serum levels of the GnRH antagonist were detectable for up to 3 days by radioimmunoassay. The 500 micrograms dose of GnRHant also reduced testicular LH and PRL receptors by 30 and 50% respectively, at 24 h; by 72 h, PRL receptors and LH receptors were still slightly below control values. In castrate rats, treatment with GnRHant reduced pituitary GnRH receptors by 90% and suppressed serum LH and FSH to hypophysectomized levels. Such responses in castrate animals were observed following injection of relatively low doses of GnRHant (100 micrograms), after which the antagonist was detectable in serum for up to 24 h. These data suggest that extensive or complete occupancy of the pituitary receptor population by a GnRH antagonist is necessary to reduce plasma gonadotropin and testosterone levels in intact rats. In castrate animals, partial occupancy of the available GnRH receptor sites appears to be sufficient to inhibit the elevated rate of gonadotropin secretion.  相似文献   

2.
Crossbred boars were (a) immunized against GnRH conjugated to human serum globulin (200 micrograms GnRH-hSG) in Freund's adjuvant at 12 weeks of age and boosted at weeks 18 and 20 (N = 10), (b) served as controls and received hSG only in adjuvant (N = 10), or castrated at weaning (N = 10). At 24 weeks of age (immediately before slaughter), the boars were challenged with saline or pig LH (1 microgram/10 kg body weight). After slaughter, fresh testicular fragments were incubated with pig LH (0.05 and 0.2 ng/2 ml medium) to assess the effects of immunization on Leydig cell function. Pituitary contents of LH and FSH, and testicular LH receptor content were also measured. The results indicated that plasma LH and testosterone concentrations, pituitary LH content, testicular LH receptor content, testis and sex accessory organ weights were significantly reduced in GnRH-immunized boars compared to hSG-adjuvant controls. However, plasma and pituitary FSH content were not affected by high antibody titres generated against GnRH. The testicular testosterone response to exogenous LH in vivo and in vitro was significantly reduced (P less than 0.05) in GnRH-immunized boars. These results indicate that active immunization against GnRH impairs pituitary and Leydig cell functions in boars.  相似文献   

3.
Clinical and experimental studies are described on the effects of a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist (A) and antagonist (Ant.) on testicular endocrine function. Testicular effects of long-term gonadotropin suppression by GnRH-A were assessed during treatment of prostatic cancer patients. The testis tissue removed after 6 months of A treatment had less than 5% of the testosterone(T)-producing capacity in comparison to testis tissue removed from untreated control patients. However, the LH receptors (R) and responsiveness of T output to LH stimulation in vitro were unchanged. FSH-R decreased by 70%. Hence, despite suppression of gonadotropins and testicular androgen production during long-term GnRH-A treatment the responsiveness to exogenous gonadotropins is maintained. The testicular effects of a gonadotropin suppression induced with GnRH-Ant. and testicular GnRH-R blockade were studied in rats. Besides decreases of gonadotropins and testicular T, systemic Ant. treatment decreased testicular Prl-R, but had no effect on LH-R or FSH-R. Bromocriptine-induced hypoprolactinemia, in contrast, decreased LH-R but had no effect on Prl-R. The results indicate reciprocal regulation of LH-R and Prl-R, and that testicular steroidogenesis and LH-R are under differential regulation, the former by LH, the latter by Prl. In another study, testicular GnRH-R, and consequently the action of a putative testicular GnRH-like factor, were blocked by unilateral intratesticular infusion of Ant. (1 week, Alzet osmotic pumps). The treatment resulted in 90% occupancy of testicular GnRH-R in the Ant.-infused testes, and this was associated with decreased levels of R for LH, FSH and Prl, and of T. The results indicated that the testicular GnRH-R have a physiological function in subtle stimulation of Leydig cell functions.  相似文献   

4.
Effective interactions among the various compartments of the testis are necessary to sustain efficiency of the spermatogenic process. To study the intercellular communication between the Sertoli and Leydig cells in the complete absence of FSH receptor signaling, we have examined several indices of Leydig cell function in FSH receptor knockout (FORKO) mice. The serum testosterone levels were reduced in the 3- to 4-mo-old adult FORKO males compared to wild-type mice despite no significant alteration in circulating LH levels. Treatment with ovine LH resulted in a dose-dependent increase in serum testosterone levels in all three genotypes (+/+, +/-, and -/-). However, the response in FORKO males was significantly reduced. Similarly, the total intratesticular testosterone per testis was also lower, but the intratesticular testosterone per milligram of testis was significantly elevated in the FORKO males. Western blot analysis revealed an apparent higher expression of the enzyme 3beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3beta-HSD) as well as LH-receptor density in the testis of FORKO males. Immunohistochemistry also showed an increase in the intensity of 3beta-HSD staining in the testicular sections of FORKO males. Although LH receptor binding increased per unit weight in FORKO mice, the total LH binding remained the same in all genotypes. Taken together, the results of the present study suggest that, in the absence of FSH receptor signaling, the testicular milieu is altered to affect Leydig cell response to LH such that circulating testosterone is reduced in the adult mutant. Studies are currently under way to understand the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Testicular descent was prevented unilaterally in newborn rats by cutting the gubernaculum testis. At 100 days of age, the number of Leydig and Sertoli cells per testis, the concentration of receptors for LH, FSH, prolactin and GnRH, and endogenous concentrations of progesterone and testosterone were determined. The weight of the abdominal testes was reduced by 80%, but in spite of this they contained as many Sertoli (32.8 +/- 1.3 X 10(6), mean +/- s.e.m., n = 6) and Leydig (28.2 +/- 1.7 X 10(6) cells as did scrotal testes (32.1 +/- 2.5 X 10(6) and 24.3 +/- 1.2 X 10(6) respectively). The numbers of receptors for LH (3.2 +/- 0.2 and 1.0 +/- 0.2 pmol/testis, mean +/- s.e.m., n = 11), FSH (358 +/- 11.0 and 96.3 +/- 12.6 fmol/testis) and prolactin (535 +/- 32.7 and 92.4 +/- 13.2 fmol/testis) were reduced (P less than 0.001) in abdominal testes, but the number of GnRH receptors was unaffected (8.9 +/- 1.4 and 12.1 +/- 1.8 fmol/testis, n = 6). Testicular testosterone concentration (30.9 +/- 4.4 vs 15.4 +/- 3.2 ng/g, n = 11, P less than 0.001), but not that of progesterone (0.87 +/- 0.10 vs 1.01 +/- 0.21 ng/g), was decreased in abdominal testes. The decreased receptor and androgen values reflect functional disturbances in the abdominal testes. The changed local milieu within abdominal testes may reduce hormone receptor concentrations which are then involved in the observed Leydig cell dysfunction.  相似文献   

7.
This experiment determined if the degree of stimulation of the pituitary gland by GnRH affects the suppressive actions of inhibin and testosterone on gonadotropin secretion in rams. Two groups (n = 5) of castrated adult rams underwent hypothalamopituitary disconnection and were given two i.v. injections of vehicle or 0.64 microg/kg of recombinant human inhibin A (rh-inhibin) 6 h apart when treated with i.m. injections of oil and testosterone propionate every 12 h for at least 7 days. Each treatment was administered when the rams were infused i.v. with 125 ng of GnRH every 4 h (i.e., slow-pulse frequency) and 125 ng of GnRH every hour (i.e., fast-pulse frequency). The FSH concentrations and LH pulse amplitude were lower and the LH concentrations higher during the fast GnRH pulse frequency. The GnRH pulse frequency did not influence the ability of rh-inhibin and testosterone to suppress FSH secretion. Testosterone did not affect LH secretion. Following rh-inhibin treatment, LH pulse amplitude decreased at the slow, but not at the fast, GnRH pulse frequency, and LH concentrations decreased at both GnRH pulse frequencies. We conclude that the degree of stimulation of the pituitary by GnRH does not influence the ability of inhibin or testosterone to suppress FSH secretion in rams. Inhibin may be capable of suppressing LH secretion under conditions of low GnRH.  相似文献   

8.
Several characteristics of the hypothalamo-hypophysial axis were examined after down-regulation of GnRH receptors and the desensitization which accompanies it in the ewe. Down-regulation of GnRH receptors, induced by i.v. infusion of GnRH (2.5 micrograms/h) for 24 h, resulted in a 50% decrease in the number of receptors for GnRH at the end of the infusion period. The number of receptors for GnRH was restored to control values by 6 h after the infusion ended and remained stable at 12, 24, 48, 72 and 96 h after infusion. The amount of LH released in response to an i.v. injection of 100 micrograms GnRH was reduced by 82% at the end of the infusion period, but there was no significant reduction in the GnRH-induced release of FSH. The GnRH-induced release of LH was restored by 12 h after the infusion ended; however, the amount of FSH released in response to GnRH was not different from control values at any time. A decrease in both the amplitude and frequency of endogenous pulses of LH was observed from 0 to 12 h after the end of the infusion period. At no time did the concentration of gonadotrophins in the pituitary change. These results demonstrate that replenishment of receptors for GnRH and recovery of the ability of the gonadotroph to release LH are associated events. However, the GnRH-induced release of FSH does not appear to be closely related to the number of GnRH receptors. We suggest that continuous exposure to GnRH may inhibit the hypothalamic pulse generator as well as the pituitary response to the pulse generator.  相似文献   

9.
The pituitary gonadotropins luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) regulate steroidogenesis and spermatogenesis by activating receptors expressed by Leydig cells (LH receptor) and Sertoli cells (FSH receptor), respectively. This concept is also valid in fish, although the piscine receptors may be less discriminatory than their mammalian counterparts. The main biological activity of LH is to regulate Leydig-cell steroid production. Steroidogenesis is moreover modulated in an autoregulatory manner by androgens. The male sex steroids (testosterone in higher vertebrates, 11-ketotestosterone in fish) are required for spermatogenesis, but their mode of action has remained obscure. While piscine FSH also appears to have steroidogenic activity, specific roles have not been described yet in the testis. The feedback of androgens on gonadotrophs presents a complex pattern. Aromatizable androgens/estrogens stimulate LH synthesis in juvenile fish; this effect fades out during maturation. This positive feedback on LH synthesis is balanced by a negative feedback on LH release, which may involve GnRH neurones. While the role of GnRH as LH secretagogue is evident, we have found no indication in adult male African catfish for a direct, GnRH-mediated stimulation of LH synthesis. The limited available information at present precludes a generalized view on the testicular feedback on FSH.  相似文献   

10.
GnRH receptor values are 30-50% of normal in pituitaries of hpg male mice, and testicular LH receptors only 8% of normal (160.4 +/- 17.6 and 2013 +/- 208.1 fmol/testis respectively). In male hpg mice bearing fetal preoptic area (POA) hypothalamic implants for 10 days there was no change in pituitary GnRH receptors, pituitary gonadotrophin content, or seminal vesicle weight. However, testicular weights and LH receptors were doubled in 4/10 mice and 2 had increased serum FSH levels. Between 26 and 40 days after implantation pituitary GnRH receptors and pituitary LH increased to normal male levels, although at 40 days serum and pituitary FSH concentrations had reached only 50% of normal values. Testicular and seminal vesicle weights increased more than 10-fold by 40 days after implantation and LH receptors to 70% of normal. In hpg female mice bearing hypothalamic implants for 30-256 days pituitary gonadotrophin concentrations were normal, even though GnRH receptors reached only 60% of normal values (6.18 +/- 0.4 and 9.8 +/- 0.4 fmol/pituitary respectively). Serum FSH was substantially increased from values of less than 30 ng/ml in hpg mice to within the normal female range in hypothalamic implant recipients. Ovarian and uterine weights increased after hypothalamic grafting from only 4-5% to over 74% of normal values. LH receptors increased from 6.5 +/- 1.3 fmol/ovary for hpg mice to 566.9 +/- 39.2 fmol/ovary for implant recipients. Vaginal opening occurred about 23 days after implantation and these animals displayed prolonged periods of oestrus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Adult rats were made bilaterally cryptorchid and studied at intervals of 3, 7, 14 or 21 days to study temporal changes in Leydig cell function. Serum FSH and LH levels were measured and the cross-sectional area of the Leydig cells assessed by morphometry. The function of the Leydig cells was judged by the binding of 125I-labelled hCG to testicular tissue in vitro and the testosterone response of the testis to hCG stimulation in vitro. By 3 days after cryptorchidism, the binding of labelled hCG to testicular tissue was significantly decreased compared to that of controls, but the testes were able to respond to hCG stimulation in vitro. At 7, 14 and 21 days after cryptorchidism, an enhanced testosterone response was observed and the size of the Leydig cells was significantly greater than that of the controls, which indicated increased secretory activity by the cryptorchid testis. Although serum FSH levels were significantly elevated after 3 days of cryptorchidism, serum LH levels did not rise until 7 days, thereby suggesting that the loss of receptors is unlikely to result from down-regulation by LH. The reduced testosterone response of the cryptorchid testis in vivo to low doses of hCG and the enhanced response at high doses are probably related to the reduced blood flow to the cryptorchid testis and the decreased sensitivity of the Leydig cells induced by LH/hCG receptor loss.  相似文献   

12.
The goal of this study was to explore mechanisms that mediate hypersecretion of LH and progressive loss of cyclicity in female sheep exposed during fetal life to excess testosterone. Our working hypothesis was that prenatal testosterone excess, by its androgenic action, amplifies GnRH-induced LH (but not FSH) secretion and, thus, hypersecretion of LH in adulthood, and that this results from altered developmental gene expression of GnRH and estradiol (E2) receptors, gonadotropin subunits, and paracrine factors that differentially regulate LH and FSH synthesis. We observed that, relative to controls, females exposed during fetal life to excess testosterone, as well as the nor-aromatizable androgen dihydrotestosterone, exhibited enhanced LH but not FSH responses to intermittent delivery of GnRH boluses under conditions in which endogenous LH (GnRH) pulses were suppressed. Luteinizing hormone hypersecretion was more evident in adults than in prepubertal females, and it was associated with development of acyclicity. Measurement of pituitary mRNA concentrations revealed that prenatal testosterone excess induced developmental changes in gene expression of pituitary GnRH and E2 receptors and paracrine modulators of LH and FSH synthesis in a manner consistent with subsequent amplification of LH release. Together, this series of studies suggests that prenatal testosterone excess, by its androgenic action, amplifies GnRH-induced LH response, leading to LH hypersecretion and acyclicity in adulthood, and that this programming involves developmental changes in expression of pituitary genes involved in LH and FSH release.  相似文献   

13.
The potential of GnRH analogues for regulating testicular function is reviewed. Our experiments showed that constant infusion of GnRH agonists effectively suppressed testicular function in monkeys. In men, however, spermatogenesis could not be suppressed to achieve azoospermia uniformly. GnRH antagonists, although at much higher dosages than agonists, caused a more rapid and uniform inhibition of testis function. Spermatogenesis was reversibly disrupted at the spermatogonial level. Concomitant testosterone supplementation, used to maintain libido and potency, attenuated the antitesticular effects of GnRH analogues. In monkeys testosterone appears to stimulate spermatogenesis directly on the testicular level, while evidence has been obtained that in rats testosterone can also stimulate the release and synthesis of FSH under antagonist mediated blockage of pituitary GnRH receptors. When extrapolating to human studies special care has to be exerted in the selection of testosterone substitution regimens. Although the agonistic and antagonistic analogues of GnRH ultimately exert their antireproductive effects via inhibition of gonadotropin secretion the antagonists may have the greater potential for male fertility regulation due to quicker pituitary and testicular suppression.  相似文献   

14.
Female Wistar rats were treated with busulfan or with solvent on Day 20 of pregnancy. Thirty male offspring of each group were killed at 38 days of age. In busulfan-treated rats, compared to controls, hypothalamic LH-RH content was decreased by 52%, whereas pituitary LH and FSH concentrations were increased by 60 and 43% respectively. Plasma LH and FSH were increased by 112 and 275% respectively. Prolactin concentrations were not changed, but plasma testosterone concentration was decreased by 48%. The total number of Leydig cells per testis was decreased by 52%, and LH binding sites per testis were decreased by 70%. The total number of Sertoli cells was decreased by 44%, while FSH binding sites per testis were decreased by 62%. Spermatogenesis was practically absent after prenatal exposure to busulfan. These data demonstrate that on Day 20 of pregnancy all the dividing cells in the fetal testes were depleted by an antimitotic treatment. The stimulation of the hypothalamo-pituitary axis could have been partly induced by the decrease in testosterone production, and by the aplasia of germ cells involving modifications of the remaining Sertoli and Leydig cells.  相似文献   

15.
The differential mechanisms reducing androgen secretion by LHRH agonists are discussed with relevance to clinical therapy. LH secretion can be desensitised by exposure to agonists using high doses, frequent injections or sustained release/constant infusion. The desensitized pituitary is refractory to hypothalamic stimulation. Pituitary receptor suppression is associated with depletion of pituitary gonadotrophin content, and a decline of LH and FSH secretion to a basal rate. Recovery of LH responsiveness to endogenous LHRH stimulation requires restitution of gonadotrophin content (about 7 days in rats). After long-term infusions in normal men, testosterone secretion recovers within 7-10 days. The binding capacity of testicular LH/hCG receptors is reduced in rats after supraphysiological gonadotrophin stimulation, by agonists or directly by hCG, concomitantly the steroidogenic capacity of the testis in vitro is impaired. Qualitative changes in androgen biosynthesis are a marked fall in testosterone production and dose-dependent enhancement of progesterone production. After 12 months of buserelin injections, the changes in hCG-stimulated rat testes are an increased ratio of progesterone/17-OH-progesterone (inhibition of 17-hydroxylase), a reduced capacity for secretion of androstenedione and testosterone (block of 17,20-desmolase), and increased 5 alpha-pregnane-3,20-dione (this steroid inhibits the 17,20-desmolase, similarly to progesterone). After treatment, Leydig cell function recovers completely. Leydig cell hyperplasia is observed as a result of the steroidogenic changes. These findings in rats have not been observed in dogs, monkeys or in humans.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Hemicastration of Holstein bulls at 3 months of age resulted in increased (P<0.005) testicular weitht and testis sperm cell content at 330 days after treatment, but did not alter sperm cell concentration in the remaining hypertrophied testis. Radioimmuroassay of blood hormones at 1, 6, 12, and 24 weeks after treatment revealed that unilateral castration did not alter (P>0.1) basal levels or GnRH response profiles of either LH or testosterone compared to intact bulls. Hemicastration caused FSH to be elevated (P<0.01) compared to intact bulls at all sampling periods in both unstimulated and GnRH stimulated bulls. Prolactin varied with season and was greater (P<0.001) in hemicastrated bulls than in intact bulls at 1 and 6 weeks after treatment. Results indicate that unilateral castration at 3 months of age caused testicular hypertrophy of both steroidogenic and gametogenic function and this phenomena may be triggered by increased FSH or prolactin secretion, or both. Further, results indicate different testicular regulation mechanisms exist for pituitary LH and FSH release in bulls.  相似文献   

17.
18.
L V Swanson  S K McCarthy 《Steroids》1986,47(2-3):101-114
A significant dose-response relationship between gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and time to luteinizing hormone (LH) peak, peak serum LH and total serum LH was obtained in prepubertal Holstein heifers (28 weeks of age) (Experiment 1). For the second experiment, the effect of steroid feedback on the anterior pituitary was determined. A steady infusion of saline, estradiol-17 beta or progesterone was maintained for 24 h while GnRH, in various schemes, was administered 8 h after the beginning of steroid infusion. Estradiol-17 beta infusion (2.08 micrograms/h), although it did not affect peripheral concentrations of estrogen, caused an LH release 24 to 30 h later in 37.5% of the heifers. This amount of exogenous estrogen did not affect the LH response to a single GnRH (4 micrograms) challenge. When the same GnRH dosage (4 micrograms) was administered 6 times at hourly intervals, the heifers infused with estradiol had a lower response after the first 2 injections of GnRH and a greater response after the last 4 injections than heifers infused with saline. When GnRH was infused (4 micrograms/h) for 6 h, beginning 8 h after steroid infusion, estradiol infusion caused a significantly higher peak LH and total LH release than an infusion of either saline or progesterone (7.3 micrograms/h). The progesterone infusion had no effect on the GnRH-stimulated LH release. We conclude that prepubertal dairy heifers have an anterior pituitary capable of responding to the feedback effect of estrogen in a positive manner.  相似文献   

19.
Marked differences were observed between the clearance profiles of immunoreactive plasma gonadotropins in gonadectomized and intact male bullfrogs (Rana catesbeiana). The disappearance patterns of endogenously secreted follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) from plasma of intact animals following chronic (1-4 days) infusion with gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) showed multiple components, but the initial few half-lives were relatively short (less than 1 h) and about 90% of both gonadotropins were cleared from the plasma within 6 h. Hypophysectomy had no effect on gonadotropin clearance rates following the termination of GnRH infusion. Clearance profiles of exogenous gonadotropins after chronic (6 h) infusion of bullfrog pituitary extract were similar to those observed after GnRH infusion. Gonadectomized frogs also cleared these infused pituitary gonadotropins at the same rate as intact animals, confirming that gonadectomy did not impair peripheral clearance mechanisms. Relatively rapid clearance rates were also observed for endogenous FSH and LH in normal untreated frogs. By comparison, the disappearance rates of FSH and LH from plasma of six long-term gonadectomized males following hypophysectomy were extremely slow: first half-lives for FSH and LH were 25.6 h and 17.2 h, respectively, and subsequent half-lives were even longer. Several weeks were required to clear fully the FSH and LH from the circulation in these males. Thus, a significant change in the physicochemical form of the circulating gonadotropins after gonadectomy in the male bullfrog is postulated; the corresponding changes in clearance rates were considerably greater than have been observed in any other species.  相似文献   

20.
We recently demonstrated that chronic daily administration of a superactive GnRH analog to intact rats resulted in an initial stimulation of serum LH levels with a subsequent return of LH levels to baseline at a time when testosterone levels were marked decreased. These data demonstrated pituatary desensitization following chronic GnRH analog treatment. Administration of GnRH analog with a dose of testosterone which did not markedly lower serum LH levels when administered alone prevented the stimulation of LH secretion by analog. The present studies were undertaken to determine the effects of GnRH analog and testosterone administration on the regulation of pituitary GnRH receptors. Pituitary GnRH receptor binding was increased by analog treatment alone at 20 days and returned to control levels at 40 and 60 days of treatment in parallel to the observed changes in serum LH, demonstrating that one mechanism by which chronic GnRH analog treatment leads to pituitary desensitization is down-regulation of pituitary GnRH receptors. Testosterone administration alone decreased pituitary GnRH receptor binding. Combined GnRH analog and testosterone administration prevented the increase in pituitary GnRH receptors observed with analog administration alone. These studies demonstrate that changes in pituitary GnRH receptor binding correlate with changes in serum LH and that the stimulatory effects of analog administration on LH are sensitive to inhibition by small doses of testosterone.  相似文献   

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