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1.
The present study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that the deficits in copulatory behavior observed in hyperprolactinemic male rats may be related to a reduction in hypothalamic release of luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH). Adult male Fischer 344 rats were made hyperprolactinemic by ectopic pituitary grafts or were sham operated and 30 min prior to being tested for copulatory performance received a single subcutaneous injection of 500 ng LHRH, 100 ng LHRH, or saline. On different occasions, testosterone (T) levels were measured in plasma collected 30 min following identical treatments. Plasma prolactin (PRL) levels were determined in samples collected 30 min after injection of 500 ng LHRH. Pituitary grafting produced the expected, significant increase in plasma PRL levels and significant deficits in copulatory behavior. Treatment of hyperprolactinemic subjects with 500 ng LHRH significantly reduced both the time to first intromission and the time to ejaculation to times comparable with those of sham-operated subjects. The 100-ng dose produced a significant reduction in mount frequency. Plasma T levels were significantly elevated following either dose of LHRH. These results demonstrate that exogenous LHRH can restore normal copulatory performance in hyperprolactinemic male rats and support the hypothesis that a reduction in hypothalamic LHRH release is responsible for the behavioral deficits observed in those animals.  相似文献   

2.
Leptin, the adipocyte-derived plasma hormone, and CNS GLP-1 neurons reduce food intake and body weight. GLP-1 is produced in the CNS by post-translational processing of pre-proglucagon. ICV leptin administration prevented the reduction in hypothalamic GLP-1 peptide content seen in pair-fed food-restricted rats (P < 0.05). There was a significant overall positive correlation between pre-proglucagon mRNA expression in the NTS and hypothalamic GLP-1 peptide content (r = +0.34, P < 0.05). Intraperitoneal leptin administration also increased hypothalamic GLP-1 peptide in food-restricted mice (P < 0. 05). This supports the hypothesis that the anorectic actions of leptin are in part due to stimulation of GLP-1 neurons. Reduced CNS GLP-1 neuronal activity during food deprivation may act to stimulate feeding behaviour, and perhaps also inhibit hypothalamic LHRH neurons, as part of the neuroendocrine response to starvation.  相似文献   

3.
Studies on partially purified chicken hypothalamic luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) utilizing chromatography, radioimmunoassay with region-specific antisera, enzymic inactivation, and chemical modification established that the peptide is structurally different from mammalian hypothalamic LHRH. These studies demonstrated that arginine in position 8 is substituted by a neutral amino acid. On the basis of conformational criteria and evolutionary probability of amino acid interchange for arginine, the most likely substitution was glutamine. We therefore synthesized [Gln8]-LHRH and established that it had identical chromatographic, immunologic, and biological properties to the natural chicken peptide. In concurrent studies, purification of 17 micrograms of an LHRH from 249,000 chicken hypothalami was achieved using acetic acid extraction, immuno-affinity chromatography, and cation exchange and reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. Amino acid composition and sequence analyses confirmed the structure of this form of chicken LHRH as pGlu-His-Trp-Ser-Tyr-Gly-Leu-Gln-Pro-Gly-NH2.  相似文献   

4.
张樟进  任惠民 《生理学报》1992,44(3):275-281
Hypothalamic and plasma luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) levels following orchidectomy (ORDX) and testosterone (T)-replacement were compared between young (2-3 months old) and aged (24-26 months old) male rats by radioimmunoassay. Plasma T level and hypothalamic LHRH content are markedly decreased in the aged rat as compared to those of the young rat, whereas plasma LHRH levels are similar in the two groups. Following ORDX and ORDX plus T-replacement, plasma T levels in both groups are about the same, whereas the rates of variation of hypothalamic and plasma LHRH levels in the aged rat are significantly lower than those in the young rat. These results suggest that the negative feedback mechanism of the hypothalamic LHRHergic system is impaired in the aged rat, which may be one of the important reasons causing age-dependent deterioration of the functional control of hypothalamic-pituitary-testicular axis.  相似文献   

5.
Sex steroids and the control of LHRH secretion   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Gonadal steroids are important hormonal signals that regulate the activity of LHRH synthesizing and releasing neurons. Aside from a direct effect through the feedback mechanisms exerted at hypothalamic and/or anterior pituitary level, gonadal steroids may modify the rhythmic LHRH release by modulating other systems affecting LHRH neurons. 1. In ovariectomized E2-treated female rats, progesterone is able to evoke LHRH release from the perifused hypothalamus without affecting LH and FSH release. 2. Excitatory amino acids (EAA) and their related analogs (NMDA and kainate) are known to stimulate LH release in young rats. When tested in a perifusion system on hypothalamic and anterior pituitary tissues, they differentially stimulate the release of LHRH (NMDA) and of LH (KA); their effect on both structures is markedly reduced following orchidectomy. It appears that gonadal steroids might exert a facilitatory action on the neurosecretory activity of LHRH neurons as well as a modulatory influence on the effect of EAA.  相似文献   

6.
B T Miller  T J Cicero 《Life sciences》1986,39(25):2447-2454
Ascorbic acid is frequently used in in vitro studies of neurotransmitter-evoked release of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) from hypothalamic fragments. Although it is assumed that ascorbate merely prevents the oxidative degradation of catecholamines, we have discovered that ascorbic acid itself produces significant increases in the release of LHRH. Our studies showed that ascorbic acid, at concentrations below 1 mM, produced a dose-dependent release of LHRH from incubated rat mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH). The magnitude of the ascorbate-induced release was in the range of 100-200% above controls; significant amounts of LHRH were released only if the MBH were incubated with ascorbate for time periods longer than 30 minutes. We also found that ascorbate-induced increases in LHRH were equivalent to those produced by another LHRH secretagogue, naloxone, and that the combined effects of the two substances were additive in nature. Although the mechanisms underlying this effect are not fully understood, nonspecific chemical reduction is probably not a factor since sodium metabisulfite did not induce the release of LHRH. It seems probable that ascorbate may enhance the activity of endogenous norepinephrine in the MBH and, thereby, lead to increased release of LHRH.  相似文献   

7.
We and others have previously reported the existence of hypothalamic and anterior pituitary (AP) enzymes that degrade luteinizing hormone (LH)-releasing hormone (LHRH). We have further characterized these LHRH-degrading activities (LHRH-DA) and in addition assessed the role of LHRH-DA in LHRH release from median eminence (ME) tissue in vitro. Major LHRH-DA components were separated and their molecular weights were estimated by gel filtration chromatography. The role of LHRH-DA in LHRH release was determined by release studies from isolated ME, in the presence and absence of N-tosyl L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone (TPCK) and/or norepinephrine (NEpi). Degradation and in vitro release studies were performed by using LHRH analogs with amino acid substitutions at their 5-6 bond. Biological activity of these analogs was assessed by measuring in vitro LH release from dispersed anterior pituitary cells. LHRH-DA was determined by high-performance liquid chromatography; LH and LHRH were measured by radioimmunoassay. Separation of LHRH-DA by gel filtration chromatography yielded two major enzymatic activities: a Tyr5-Gly6 cleaving endopeptidase and a post-proline cleaving enzyme. Although LHRH-DA from AP and ME produced identical degradation fragments, the former had 3-fold greater specific activity than the latter. LHRH moieties with a Tyr5-Gly6 bond substitution were more resistant to enzymatic degradation and had greater biological activity than LHRH moieties with a Tyr5-Gly6 bond. TPCK decreased LHRH-DA and increased NEpi-stimulated in vitro release of LHRH from isolated ME.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Nitric oxide (NO) affects reproductive processes both at the level of the brain and reproductive tract and this review is focused on its role as an essential regulator of the hypothalamic control of reproduction. The data gathered indicate that glutamate stimulates noradrenergic neurons which subsequently activate NO-ergic cells via alpha1-adrenergic receptors. The released NO diffuses into luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) terminals where it triggers LHRH secretion by activation of guanylyl cyclase and cyclooxygenase. The NO released by estrogen-stimulated NO-ergic ventromedial neurons plays a crucial role in the regulation of sexual behavior. Furthermore, an increased expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase in the LHRH and oxytocin neurons underlies the destructive action of NO on the aging of the hypothalamic neuroendocrine pathways. Within the hypothalamo-hypophyseal system, NO exerts an inhibitory effect in the control of oxytocin secretion. This action seems to employ an indirect mechanism by which NO may modulate the release of GABA. This review provides an overview of the role of NO in hypothalamic control of LHRH and oxytocin release, aging of the LHRH and oxytocin neurons and sexual behavior.  相似文献   

9.
应用放射免疫分析(RIA)技术比较了年青(2—3月龄)和老年(24—26月龄)雄性大鼠下丘脑和血浆促黄体生成素释放激素(LHRH)水平及其在睾丸切除(ORDX)和睾丸酮(T)替代下LHRH水平的变化。老年大鼠血浆T水平明显降低,下丘脑LHRH含量亦呈明显下降趋势,但血浆LHRH水平与年青大鼠十分接近。在ORDX和T替代下,两组动物血浆T水平没有明显差别,但老年大鼠下丘脑和血浆LHRH的变化率却不同程度地低于年青大鼠。上述结果提示,老年雄性大鼠下丘脑LHRH神经元系统的负反馈能力明显削弱,这也许是下丘脑-垂体-睾丸轴呈增龄性衰变的重要原因之一。  相似文献   

10.
The hypophysiotrophic hormones isolated from the mammalian hypothalamus are distributed throughout the nervous system of vertebrate species. Although their role in regulating pituitary hormone secretion in mammals is clear, a similar function in lower species has not been established. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone is unable to stimulate thyroid function in amphibia and fish, despite being present in the hypothalamus and brain of these species of high concentration. The tripeptide is also found in high concentration in frog skin, a tissue derived from (or programed by) primitive neuroectoderm that is also a rich source of other peptides structurally related to neural peptides located in mammalian brain and gut. Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) is able to activate gonadotropin secretion in submammalian species but there is evidence that the LHRH material present in avian, reptilian, and piscine brain is not identical to the mammalian decapeptide. An LHRH-like material present in frog sympathetic ganglia appears to function as a neurotransmitter in this location. Somatostatin is present in high concentrations in the hypothalamus, brain, pancreas, and gastrointestinal tract of all vertebrates and chromatographically is identical to the mammalian material, suggesting that this peptide is an "ancient" molecule with an important role in neuronal pancreatic and digestive function. The hypothalamic releasing hormones are part of a family of neural peptides that have a widespread anatomic and phylogenetic distribution and form a diffuse neuroendocrine system. It an material, suggesting that this peptide is an "ancient" molecule with an important role in neuronal pancreatic and digestive function. The hypothalamic releasing hormones are part of a family of neural peptides that have a widespread anatomic and phylogenetic distribution and form a diffuse neuroendocrine system. It an material, suggesting that this peptide is an "ancient" molecule with an important role in neuronal pancreatic and digestive function. The hypothalamic releasing hormones are part of a family of neural peptides that have a widespread anatomic and phylogenetic distribution and form a diffuse neuroendocrine system. It appears likely that the releasing hormones initially arose with a neurocrine or paracrine function, and that only later in evolution did they acquire the role of regulating adenohypophysial secretion.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of hypothalamic lesions designed to destroy either the anterior median eminence (ME) or the posterior and mid-ME on pulsatile release of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) were determined in castrated male rats. In sham-operated animals, mean plasma FSH concentrations rose to peak at 10 min after the onset of sampling, whereas LH declined to a nadir during this time. In the final sample at 120 min, the mean FSH concentrations peaked as LH decreased to its minimal value. In rats with anterior ME lesions, there was suppression of LH pulses with continuing FSH pulses in 12 of 21 rats. On the other hand, in animals with posterior to mid-ME lesions, 3 out of 21 rats had elimination of FSH pulses, whereas LH pulses were maintained. Fifteen of 42 operated rats had complete ME lesions, and pulses of both hormones were abolished. The remaining 12 rats had partial ME lesions that produced a partial block of the release of both hormones. The results support the concept of separate hypothalamic control of FSH and LH release with the axons of the putative FSH-releasing factor (FSHRF) neuronal system terminating primarily in the mid- to caudal ME, whereas those of the LHRH neuronal system terminate in the anterior and mid-median eminence. We hypothesize that pulses of FSH alone are mediated by release of the FSHRF into the hypophyseal portal vessels, whereas those of LH alone are mediated by LHRH. Pulses of both gonadotropins simultaneously may be mediated by pulses of both releasing hormones simultaneously. Alternatively, relatively large pulses of LHRH alone may account for simultaneous pulses of both gonadotropins since LHRH has intrinsic FSH-releasing activity.  相似文献   

12.
Luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) is regarded as the primary hypothalamic signal that controls reproduction in the rat. Neuropeptide Y, a recently isolated hypothalamic peptide, appears to regulate LHRH secretion. Our studies show that gonadal steroids act in multiple ways to enhance the neurosecretory functions of each of these neuronal systems and, in addition, they promote excitation by NPY of LHRH release from the hypothalamic nerve terminals.  相似文献   

13.
Stress induced changes in testis function   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The mechanism through which chronic stress inhibits the hypothalamic-pituitary-testicular axis has been investigated. Chronic restraint stress decreases testosterone secretion, an effect that is associated with a decrease in plasma gonadotropin levels. In chronically stressed rats there was a decrease in hypothalamic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) content and the response on plasma gonadotropins to LHRH administration was enhanced. Thus the inhibitory effect of chronic stress on plasma LH and FSH levels seems not to be due to a reduction in pituitary responsiveness to LHRH, but rather to a modification in LHRH secretion. It has been suggested that beta-endorphin might interfere with hypothalamic LHRH secretion during stress. Chronic immobilization did not modify hypothalamic beta-endorphin, while an increase in pituitary beta-endorphin secretion was observed. Since we cannot exclude that changes in beta-endorphin secreted by the pituitary or other opioids may play some role in the stress-induced decrease in LHRH secretion, the effect of naltrexone administration on plasma gonadotropin was studied in chronically stressed rats. Naltrexone treatment did not modify the decrease in plasma concentrations of LH or FSH. These findings suggest that the inhibitory effect of restraint on the testicular axis is exerted at hypothalamic level by some mechanism other than opioids.  相似文献   

14.
Prior to the age-related loss of regular estrous cycles, female rats exhibit an attenuated preovulatory LH surge, a sign that reproductive decline is imminent. Numerous studies have revealed an important role for the hypothalamus in aging of the reproductive axis in this species. Because LHRH represents the primary hypothalamic signal that regulates gonadotropin release, assessments of LHRH neuronal activity can provide a window into hypothalamic function during reproductive aging. Studies of the dynamic activity of LHRH neurons during times of enhanced secretion have revealed deficits in middle-aged females. Available data are consistent with a decline in LHRH synthesis, transport, and secretion in middle-aged females during times of increased demand for LHRH output. Moreover, the alterations noted in LHRH neuronal function could account, in part, for the attenuation and eventual loss of the preovulatory LH surge with age. Elements extrinsic to LHRH neurons undoubtedly contribute to the decline in the parameters of LHRH neuronal function observed in middle-aged females. Whether alterations intrinsic to LHRH neurons also play a role in the age-associated reduction in LHRH synthesis and secretion remains to be determined. Recent examinations of hormone profiles during the perimenopausal period suggest that a potential hypothalamic contribution to aging of the reproductive axis in women warrants further examination.  相似文献   

15.
The fundamental aspects of the hypothalamic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH)(1) [1]pulse generator-pituitary gonadotrophin-gonadal apparatus in mammals have striking commonalities. There are, however, critical, substantive differences in the neuroendocrinology of puberty among species. The onset of puberty in the human is marked by an increase in the amplitude of LH pulses, an indirect indicator of the increase in amplitude of LHRH pulses. The hypothalamic LHRH-pituitary gonadotrophin complex is functional by at least 0.3 gestation in the human foetus; the sex difference in the fetal and neonatal pattern of LH and FSH secretion is an apparent consequence of imprinting of the fetal hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadotropin apparatus by fetal testosterone. Until about 6 months of age in boys and 12-24 months in girls, the testes and ovaries respond to the increased LH in boys and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in girls by secreting testosterone and oestradiol, respectively, reaching levels that are not again achieved before the onset of puberty. Striking features of the ontogeny of the human hypothalamic pulse generator are: (1) its development and function in the foetus; (2) the continued function of the hypothalamic LHRH pulse generator-pituitary gonadotrophin-gonadal axis in infancy; (3) the gradual damping of hypothalamic LHRH oscillator activity during late infancy; (4) its quiescence during childhood - the so-called juvenile pause; (5) during late childhood the gradual disinhibition and reactivation of the LHRH pulse generator, mainly at night; (6) the increasing amplitude of the LHRH pulses, which are reflected in the progressively increased and changing pattern of circulating LH pulses, with the approach of and during puberty. The intrinsic central nervous system (CNS) mechanisms responsible for the inhibition of the LHRH pulse generator during childhood (the juvenile phase) involve the major role of an inhibitory neuronal system - the CNS inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and GABAergic neurons, as revealed by studies in the rhesus monkey by Terasawa and her associates. With the onset of puberty, the disinhibition and reactivation of the LHRH pulse generator is associated with a fall in GABAergic neurotransmission and a concomitant increase in the input of excitatory amino acid neurotransmitters (including glutamate) and possibly astroglial-derived growth factors. Despite remarkable progress over the past three decades, large gaps remain in our understanding of the neurobiological, genetic and environmental mechanisms involved in the control of the onset of puberty. The role of leptin in the control of the onset of puberty is reviewed. Severe leptin deficiency is associated with hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism; it appears that a critical level of leptin and a leptin signal is required to achieve puberty. The weight of evidence supports the hypothesis that leptin acts as one of several permissive factors and not a trigger in the onset of human puberty. The application of these advances provides a framework for the described classification of sexual precocity and delayed puberty.1 GnRH is synonymous with LHRH.  相似文献   

16.
It is now clear that astroglial cells actively contribute to both the generation and flow of information within the central nervous system. In the hypothalamus, astrocytes regulate the secretory activity of neuroendocrine neurons. A small subset of these neurons secrete luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), a neuropeptide essential for sexual development and adult reproductive function. Astrocytes stimulate LHRH secretion via cell-cell signaling mechanisms involving growth factors recognized by receptors with either serine/threonine or tyrosine kinase activity. Two members of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) family and their respective tyrosine kinase receptors appear to play key roles in this regulatory process. Transforming growth factor-alpha (TGFalpha) and its distant congeners, the neuregulins (NRGs), are produced in hypothalamic astrocytes. They stimulate LHRH secretion indirectly, via activation of erbB-1/erbB-2 and erbB-4/erbB-2 receptor complexes also located on astrocytes. Activation of these receptors leads to release of prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)), which then binds to specific receptors on LHRH neurons to elicit LHRH secretion. Gonadal steroids facilitate this glia-to-neuron communication process by acting at three different steps along the signaling pathway. They (a) increase astrocytic gene expression of at least one of the EGF-related ligands (TGFalpha), (b) increase expression of at least two of the receptors (erbB-4 and erbB-2), and (c) enhance the LHRH response to PGE(2) by up-regulating in LHRH neurons the expression of specific PGE(2) receptor isoforms. Focal overexpression of TGFalpha in either the median eminence or preoptic area of the hypothalamus accelerates puberty. Conversely, blockade of either TGFalpha or NRG hypothalamic actions delays the process. Thus, both TGFalpha and NRGs appear to be physiological components of the central neuroendocrine mechanism controlling the initiation of female puberty. By facilitating growth factor signaling pathways in the hypothalamus, ovarian steroids accelerate the pace and progression of the pubertal process.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of prostaglandins (PG) A1, E1, E2 and F2 alpha in the concentration range of 10(-7)--10(-4) M were studied in vitro on a rat hypothalamic tissue, collagenase-digested isolated anterior pituitary cell and Leydig cell suspension system by measuring the testosterone production of incubated Leydig cells. PGs did not change the testosterone production and the hCG sensitivity of the Leydig cells, nor the LH secretion and the LHRH sensitivity of the anterior pituitary cells. PGE2 at concentrations of 10(-6), 10(-5) and 10(-4) M significantly increased the hypothalamic tissue-induced pituitary-testicular activation, and this stimulatory effect of PGE2 was dose dependent. PGA1, PGE1 and PGF2 alpha did not alter hypothalamic LHRH release measured in vitro. The results suggest that PGE2 has a direct stimulatory effect on hypothalamic LHRH release.  相似文献   

18.
The ontogenic development of some hypothalamic neuropeptides: luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH); somatostatin (SRIF) and neurophysin (NF) and their localization in the hypothalamus of fetuses in different stages of the fetal life were studied by immunoperoxidase method. It was found that differentiation of the neurons which produce the examined hormones begins in the midstage of pregnancy. LHRH is stored in the nerve terminals of the median eminence (ME) and organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (OVLT) since 72 day of gestation and its amount gradually increases with the development of the embryo. In this stage a few immunoreactive (ir) LHRH perikarya appear but they are most numerous in the last days of pregnancy (110 day). They are localized in the most anterior periventricular parts of the hypothalamus, area preoptica, diagonal band of Broca and very rare in the medial-basal hypothalamus. Somatostatin is produced in the separate neuronal system and appears in the last days of fetal life. Neurophysin is present in both magnocellular nuclei in 72 day-old fetuses, but at the end of gestation it is seen also in some preoptico-septal region.  相似文献   

19.
The concentration of luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) (pGlu-His-Trp-Ser-Tyr-Gly-Leu-Arg-Pro-Gly-NH2), which reaches the anterior pituitary via the hypothalamo-hypophyseal portal system, appears to be controlled in part by the rate of LHRH degradation within the hypothalamus and/or pituitary. Specific, active site-directed endopeptidase inhibitors synthesized in our laboratory were used to identify the enzyme(s) involved in LHRH degradation by hypothalamic and pituitary membrane preparations, and by an intact anterior pituitary tumor cell line (AtT20). Incubation of LHRH with pituitary and hypothalamic membrane preparations led to the formation of pGlu-His-Trp (LHRH1-3) as the main reaction product. Under the same conditions, addition to the incubation mixtures of captopril, an inhibitor of the angiotensin converting enzyme, led to accumulation of pGlu-His-Trp-Ser-Tyr (LHRH1-5) and, to a lesser extent, pGlu-His-Trp-Ser-Tyr (LHRH1-6). The degradation of LHRH and the formation of the N-terminal tri- and pentapeptides was blocked by N-[1-(R,S)-carboxy-3-phenylpropyl]-Ala-Ala-Phe-p-aminobenzoate (cFP-AAF-pAB), a specific, active site directed inhibitor of endopeptidase-24.15. Some inhibition of LHRH degradation and formation of the N-terminal hexapeptide was also obtained in the presence of N-[1-carboxy-2-phenylethyl]-Phe-p-aminobenzoate (cFE-F-pAB), an inhibitor of endopeptidase-24.11. Similar results were obtained with AtT20 cell membranes and with intact AtT20 cells in monolayer culture. Following cleavage by endopeptidases the C-terminal part of LHRH was rapidly degraded by aminopeptidases. Superactive analogs of LHRH in which Gly6 was replaced by a D-amino acid are resistant to degradation by both endopeptidase-24.11 and -24.15. In vivo, when LHRH was injected directly into the third ventricle of rats, the presence of cFP-AAF-pAB inhibited LHRH degradation. It is concluded that LHRH degradation is primarily initiated by the membrane-bound form of endopeptidase-24.15 to yield pGlu-His-Trp-Ser-Tyr and to a lesser extent by endopeptidase-24.11 to yield pGlu-His-Trp-Ser-Tyr-Gly.  相似文献   

20.
The present study examines the role of cerebroventricular administered (IIIrd ventricle) galanin on LHRH and LH release in adult and immature male rats. In both age groups, galanin stimulated LHRH synthesis and release from the hypothalamus, leading to a higher release of pituitary LH which in turn increased plasma LH levels. Galantide, a galanin receptor blocker, on the other hand, drastically reduced hypothalamic LHRH and plasma LH while increasing pituitary LH. In vitro incubation of anterior pituitary cells with galanin followed by LHRH resulted in increased release of pituitary LH but not by galanin alone. Galantide exhibited no such effect either alone or with LHRH. These results indicate that galanin is an important regulator for both hypothalamic LHRH and hypophysial LH and its role is independent of age in the case of male rats.  相似文献   

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