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1.
Three experiments were conducted to determine the effects of passively immunizing pigs against gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) during the follicular phase of the estrous cycle. In Experiment 1, sows were given GnRH antibodies at weaning and they lacked estrogen secretion during the five days immediately after weaning and had delayed returns to estrus. In Experiment 2, gilts passively immunized against GnRH on Day 16 or 17 of the estrous cycle (Day 0 = first day of estrus) had lower (P<0.03) concentrations of estradiol-17beta than control gilts, and they did not exhibited estrus at the expected time (Days 18 to 22). When observed three weeks after passive immunization, control gilts had corpora lutea present on their ovaries, whereas GnRH-immunized gilts had follicles and no corpora lutea. The amount of GnRH antiserum given did not alter (P<0.05) serum concentrations of LH or pulsatile release of LH in sows and gilts. In Experiment 3, prepuberal gilts were given 1,000 IU PMSG at 0 h and GnRH antiserum at 72 and 120 h. This treatment lowered the preovulatory surge of LH and FSH, but it did not alter serum estradiol-17beta concentrations, the proportion of pigs exhibiting estrus, or the ovulation rate. These results indicate that passive immunization of pigs against GnRH before initiation of or during the early part of the follicular phase of the estrous cycle retards follicular development, whereas administration of GnRH antibodies during the latter stages of follicular development does not have an affect. Since the concentration of antibodies was not high enough to alter basal or pulsatile LH secretion, the mechanism of action of the GnRH antiserum may involve a direct ovarian action.  相似文献   

2.
The neuroendocrine manifestations of puberty converge on changes in GnRH secretion. Their appraisal through the assay of GnRH-like material in 24-hour urine extracts shows an increased excretion of this material in the late prepubertal period. The most striking pubertal changes in GnRH secretion occur on a circadian and ultradian basis. In man, they can be evaluated only indirectly. The circadian variations in LH and FSH secretion characteristic of puberty may be observed in timed fractions of 24-hour urine with some delay when compared to the variations of plasma levels. Studies on the frequency of pulsatile LH secretion and during chronic intermittent administration of GnRH support the existence of an increased frequency of GnRH secretory episodes at puberty. LH response to synthetic GnRH is directly related to the frequency of stimulation by endogenous GnRH pulses and provides a very useful index of neuroendocrine maturation in patients with delayed or precocious puberty. A direct evaluation of pulsatile GnRH secretion is possible using the rat hypothalamus in vitro. In these experimental conditions, the frequency of pulsatile GnRH release increases during very early stages of sexual maturation in the male rat. GnRH itself and beta-endorphin are inhibitory regulators of GnRH secretion in vitro and may participate in the mechanisms restraining the pulse-generating machinery in the hypothalamus before puberty.  相似文献   

3.
Hypothalamic neurons, which produce the kisspeptin family of peptide hormones (Kp), are critical for initiating puberty and maintaining estrous cyclicity by stimulating gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) release. Conversely, RFamide-related peptide-3 (RFRP3) neurons inhibit GnRH activity. It has previously been shown that neonatal exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) can alter the timing of female pubertal onset and induce irregular estrous cycles or premature anestrus. Here we tested the hypothesis that disrupted ontogeny of RFamide signaling pathways may be a mechanism underlying advanced puberty. To test this, we used a transgenic strain of Wistar rats whose GnRH neurons express enhanced green fluorescent protein. Pups were exposed by daily subcutaneous injection to vehicle, 17beta-estradiol (E2), 50 μg/kg BPA, or 50 mg/kg BPA, from Postnatal Day (PND) 0 through PND 3, and then cohorts were euthanized on PNDs 17, 21, 24, 28, and 33 (5-8 animals per age per exposure; males were collected on PNDs 21 and 33). Vaginal opening was advanced by E2 and 50 μg/kg BPA. On PND 28, females exposed to E2 and 50 μg/kg BPA had decreased RFRP-3 fiber density and contacts on GnRH neurons. RFRP3 perikarya were also decreased in females exposed to 50 μg/kg BPA. Data suggest that BPA-induced premature puberty results from decreased inhibition of GnRH neurons.  相似文献   

4.
The release profile of GnRH in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and its correlation with LH in peripheral blood of ovary-intact heifers during the estrous cycle were investigated. A silicon catheter was placed into the third ventricle of six heifers using ultrasonography. During the mid-luteal phase, the heifers were injected with prostaglandin F(2alpha) to induce luteolysis. Surges of CSF GnRH (66.7 h after prostaglandin F(2alpha) administration) and peripheral LH (66.3 h) occurred simultaneously and were coincident with the onset of estrus (67.0 h). Duration of elevated GnRH concentration considerably overlapped with the estrous phase in each of the heifers. Mean pulse frequencies of both GnRH and LH were significantly higher during the proestrous and early luteal phases than during the mid-luteal phase, while mean concentration and pulse amplitude of both GnRH and LH were not different between these three phases. Of all the GnRH pulses identified, more than 80% were accompanied by an LH pulse during the proestrous and early luteal phases. However, the proportion of GnRH pulses that were coincident with an LH pulse during the mid-luteal phase decreased to 60%. The results clearly demonstrate that a dynamic (pulse) and longer-term (surge) changes of GnRH release into CSF are physiologically expressed during the estrous cycle in heifers, and the pattern of pulsatile GnRH secretion in heifers depends upon their estrous cycle.  相似文献   

5.
Previous in vivo studies from our laboratory suggested that glucocorticoids antagonize estrogen-dependent actions on LH secretion. This study investigated whether corticosterone (B) may have similar actions on gonadotropin biosynthesis and secretion in vitro. Enzymatically dispersed anterior pituitary cells from adult female rats were cultured for 48 h in alpha-modified Eagle's medium containing 10% steroid-free horse serum with or without 0.5 nM estradiol (E2). The cells were then cultured for 24 h with or without B in the presence or absence of E2. To evaluate hormone release, 5 x 10(5) cells were incubated with varying doses of GnRH (0, 10(-11)-10(-7) M) or pulsatile GnRH (10(-9) M; 20 min/h) for 4 h. Cell and medium LH and FSH were measured by RIA. To evaluate LH biosynthesis, 5 x 10(6) cells were incubated for an additional 24 h with 10(-10) M GnRH, 60 microCi 3H-glucosamine (3H-Gln), 20 microCi 35S-methionine (35S-Met), and the appropriate steroid hormones. Radiolabeled precursor incorporation into LH subunits was determined by immunoprecipitation, followed by SDS-PAGE. Continuous exposure to GnRH stimulated LH release in a dose-dependent manner, and this response was enhanced by E2. B by itself had no effect on LH release, but inhibited LH secretion in E2-primed cells at low concentrations of GnRH (10(-10) M or less). Total LH content was not altered by GnRH or steroid treatment. Similar effects of B were observed in cells that were given a pulsatile GnRH stimulus. In contrast to LH, E2 or B enhanced GnRH-stimulated FSH release at the higher doses of GnRH, while the combination of E2 and B increased basal and further augmented GnRH-stimulated release. Total FSH content was also increased in the presence of B, but not E2 alone, and was further augmented in cells treated with both steroids. There were no effects of the steroids on the magnitude of FSH release in response to GnRH pulses, but the cumulative release of FSH was greater in the E2 + B group compared to controls, indicating an increased basal release. Independent of E2, B suppressed the incorporation of 3H-Gln into LH by more than 50% of control, with only subtle effects on the incorporation of 35S-Met.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The long-term negative feedback effects of sustained elevations in circulating estradiol and progesterone on the pulsatile secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) were evaluated in the ewe following ovariectomy during the mid-late anestrous and early breeding seasons. GnRH secretion was monitored in serial samples of hypophyseal portal blood. Steroids were administered from the time of ovariectomy by s.c. Silastic implants, which maintained plasma concentrations of estradiol and progesterone at levels resembling those that circulate during the mid-luteal phase of the estrous cycle; control ewes did not receive steroidal replacement. Analysis of hormonal pulse patterns in serial samples during 6-h periods on Days 8-10 after ovariectomy disclosed discrete, concurrent pulses of GnRH in hypothalamo-hypophyseal portal blood and LH in peripheral blood of untreated ovariectomized ewes. These pulses occurred every 97 min on the average. Treatment with either estradiol or progesterone greatly diminished or abolished detectable pulsatile secretion of GnRH and LH, infrequent pulses being evident in only 3 of 19 steroid-treated ewes. No major seasonal difference was observed in GnRH or LH pulse patterns in any group of ewes. Our findings in the ovariectomized ewe provide direct support for the conclusion that the negative-feedback effects of estradiol and progesterone on gonadotropin secretion in the ewe include an action on the brain and a consequent inhibition of pulsatile GnRH secretion.  相似文献   

7.
抗孕53影响大鼠垂体前叶对GnRH的敏感性反应   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
本实验应用动情前期大鼠垂体前叶组织块离体培养方法,观察了 A 环失碳类甾体化合物—抗孕53对 LH 基础分泌和动员性分泌的影响。实验分为对照组、GnRH 组、抗孕53组、GnRH-抗孕53组。结果表明,GnRH 可显著促进 LH 分泌并产生自激作用。GnRH 的第一次作用后,LH 分泌增加量由对照组的0.7ng/ml 增加到4.3ng/ml,而当 GnRH 第二次作用后,这一效应显著增强,由对照组的0.5ng/ml 增加到6.8ng/ml,GnRH 的两次作用效应相比,差异极显著。抗孕53可部分抑制垂体对 GnRH 的敏感性反应。抗孕53作用后,LH 分泌增加量由 GnRH 第一次作用后的4.3减至2.5ng/ml,由 GnRH 第二次作用后的6.8降至4.1ng/ml。抗孕53不影响 LH 的基础分泌,与对照组相比,两组的 LH 分泌增加量无显著差异。抗孕53对垂体的这一作用可能是通过直接影响促性腺激素细胞的代谢及调节而实现。  相似文献   

8.
The preovulatory gonadotropin surge is induced by progesterone in the cycling female rat or in the ovariectomized estrogen-treated female rat after adequate estrogen-priming activity is present. The source of progesterone under physiological conditions could be the ovary and/or the adrenal. Since the GnRH neuron does not possess estrogen and progesterone receptors, its function is modulated by other CNS neurotransmitters and neurosecretory products. Among these, excitatory amino acids (EAAs) have now been shown to play an important role in the regulation of pulsatile gonadotropin release, induction of puberty and preovulatory and steroid-induced gonadotropin surges. Glutamate, the major endogenous EAA exerts its action through ionotropic and metabotropic receptors. The ionotropic receptors consist of two major classes, the NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) and non-NMDA: kainate and AMPA ( --amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid) receptors. EAA receptors are found in hypothalamic areas involved with reproduction. While both NMDA and non-NMDA receptors are involved in the regulation of LH secretion, the NMDA receptors appear to be involved with the regulation of puberty and FSH secretion as well. Steroids increase the release rates of glutamate and aspartate in the preoptic area during the gonadotropin surge. Steroids may also regulate the hypothalamic AMPA receptors.  相似文献   

9.
In the sheep and goat, exposure of anestrous females to a conspecific male odor enhances reproductive activity. Interestingly, a previous report indicated that male goat hair stimulated pulsatile luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion in the ewe. In the present study, we addressed whether ram wool affects the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse generator activity in the female goat. Five ovariectomized (OVX) goats were chronically implanted with recording electrodes in the mediobasal hypothalamus, and manifestations of the GnRH pulse generator were monitored as characteristic increases in multiple-unit activity (MUA volleys). Wool or hair samples were collected from a mature ram, ewe and male goat, and their effects on the MUA volley were examined. The exposure to ram wool induced an MUA volley within 1 min in all five OVX goats, as did the exposure to male goat hair. The ewe wool had no effect on the timing of an MUA volley occurrence. An invariable association of MUA volleys with LH pulses in the peripheral circulation was also confirmed in two OVX goats exposed to ram wool. The present results clearly indicate that exposure to ram wool stimulates pulsatile GnRH/LH release in the female goat. Since exposure to male goat hair enhances pulsatile LH secretion in the ewe, it is likely that very similar, if not identical, molecules are contained in the male-effect pheromone in the sheep and goat.  相似文献   

10.
Many mammals, including cattle, can develop ovarian follicular cysts, but the physiological mechanisms leading to this condition remain undefined. We hypothesized that follicular cysts can develop because estradiol will induce a GnRH/LH surge on one occasion but progesterone exposure is required before another GnRH/LH surge can be induced by estradiol. In experiment 1, 14 cows were synchronized with an intravaginal progesterone insert (IPI) for 7 days, and prostaglandin F(2alpha) was given on the day of IPI removal. Estradiol benzoate (EB; 5 mg i.m.) was given 3 days before IPI removal to induce atresia of follicles. Cows were given a second EB treatment 1 day after IPI removal to induce a GnRH/LH surge in the absence of an ovulatory follicle. All cows had an LH surge following the second EB treatment, and 10 of 14 cows developed a large-follicle anovulatory condition (LFAC) that resembled follicular cysts. These LFAC cows were given a third EB treatment 15 days later, and none of the cows had an LH surge or ovulation. Cows were then either not treated (control, n = 5) or treated for 7 days with an IPI (n = 5) starting 7 days after the third EB injection. Cows were treated for a fourth time with 5 mg of EB 12 h after IPI removal. All IPI-treated, but no control, cows had an LH surge and ovulated in response to the estradiol challenge. In experiment 2, cows were induced to LFAC as in experiment 1 and were then randomly assigned to one of four treatments 1) IPI + EB, 2) IPI + GnRH (100 microg), 3) control + EB, and 4) control + GnRH. Control and IPI-treated cows had a similar LH surge and ovulation when treated with GnRH. In contrast, only IPI-treated cows had an LH surge following EB treatment. Thus, an initial GnRH/LH surge can be induced with high estradiol, but estradiol induction of a subsequent GnRH/LH surge requires exposure to progesterone. This effect is mediated by the hypothalamus, as evidenced by similar LH release in response to exogenous GnRH. This may represent the physiological condition that underlies ovarian follicular cysts.  相似文献   

11.
An increase in episodic release of LH is putatively the initial event leading to the onset of postpartum ovarian cyclicity in ewes. This experiment was conducted to determine the relationship between hypothalamic release of GnRH and onset of pulsatile secretion of LH during postpartum anestrus. Control ewes (n = 7) were monitored during the postpartum period to determine when normal estrous cycles resumed. In controls, the mean interval from parturition to the first postpartum estrus as indicated by a rise in serum progesterone greater than 1 ng/mg was 25.8 +/- 0.6 days. Additional ewes (n = 4-5) at 3, 7, 14, and 21 days postpartum (+/- 1 day) were surgically fitted with cannula for collection of hypophyseal-portal blood. Hypophyseal-portal and jugular blood samples were collected over a 6- to 7-h period at 10-min intervals. The number of GnRH pulses/6 h increased (p less than 0.05) from Day 3 postpartum (2.2 +/- 0.5) to Days 7 and 14 (3.6 +/- 0.2 and 3.9 +/- 0.4, respectively). A further increase (p less than 0.05) in GnRH pulse frequency was observed at Day 21 postpartum (6.4 +/- 0.4 pulses/6 h). Changes in pulsatile LH release paralleled changes observed in pulsatile GnRH release over Days 3, 7, 14, and 21 postpartum (0.83 +/- 0.3, 2.8 +/- 0.4, 2.9 +/- 0.6, and 4.0 +/- 1.1 pulses/6 h, respectively). GnRH pulse amplitude was higher at Day 21 than at Days 3, 7, or 14 postpartum. These findings suggest that an increase in the frequency of GnRH release promotes the onset of pulsatile LH release during postpartum anestrus in ewes.  相似文献   

12.
Divergent selection in 10-week-old Finn-Dorset ram lambs was based on the luteinizing hormone (LH) response to a pharmacological dose of GnRH (5 micrograms). After eight generations of selection, the LH responses of the two lines (low and high) to GnRH differed by a factor of five. This study investigates the pituitary sensitivity of the two lines to exogenous GnRH. Initially, two pilot studies were performed: one to determine the range of doses of GnRH which would stimulate LH pulses of similar amplitude to those seen endogenously, and the other to confirm that sodium pentobarbitone prevents pulsatile LH secretion in prepubertal ram lambs. The results indicated that barbiturate anaesthesia suppressed pulsatile LH secretion in castrated and intact ram lambs. A model system was therefore constructed in 18 10-week-old intact ram lambs (high n = 7, low n = 11), whereby endogenous pulsatile LH secretion was prevented by sodium pentobarbitone anaesthesia and the amplitudes of LH pulses produced in response to different doses of exogenous GnRH could be measured. The GnRH dose-response curves demonstrated that there was a five-fold difference in the sensitivity of the pituitary glands of the two lines to stimulation with GnRH. The projected minimum concentration of GnRH required to produce a measurable pulse of LH was 4.75 ng for the high-line animals and 26.6 ng for the low-line animals. The results indicated that the low-line animals required five times more GnRH than the high-line lambs to stimulate LH pulses of similar amplitude (high line 43.67 ng; low line 206.55 ng). These results demonstrate that selection has produced two lines of sheep which differ in the control of LH secretion at the level of the hypothalamus-pituitary gland.  相似文献   

13.
The introduction of a novel male stimulates the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis of female sheep during seasonal anestrus, leading to the resumption of follicle maturation and ovulation. How this pheromone cue activates pulsatile secretion of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH)/luteinizing hormone (LH) is unknown. We hypothesised that pheromones activate kisspeptin neurons, the product of which is critical for the stimulation of GnRH neurons and fertility. During the non-breeding season, female sheep were exposed to novel males and blood samples collected for analysis of plasma LH profiles. Females without exposure to males served as controls. In addition, one hour before male exposure, a kisspeptin antagonist (P-271) or vehicle was infused into the lateral ventricle and continued for the entire period of male exposure. Introduction of a male led to elevated mean LH levels, due to increased LH pulse amplitude and pulse frequency in females, when compared to females not exposed to a male. Infusion of P-271 abolished this effect of male exposure. Brains were collected after the male effect stimulus and we observed an increase in the percentage of kisspeptin neurons co-expressing Fos, by immunohistochemistry. In addition, the per-cell expression of Kiss1 mRNA was increased in the rostral and mid (but not the caudal) arcuate nucleus (ARC) after male exposure in both aCSF and P-271 treated ewes, but the per-cell content of neurokinin B mRNA was decreased. There was also a generalized increase in Fos positive cells in the rostral and mid ARC as well as the ventromedial hypothalamus of females exposed to males. We conclude that introduction of male sheep to seasonally anestrous female sheep activates kisspeptin neurons and other cells in the hypothalamus, leading to increased GnRH/LH secretion.  相似文献   

14.
Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) is a common disorder characterized by ovulatory dysfunction and hyperandrogenemia (HA). Neuroendocrine abnormalities including increased gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse frequency, increased luteinizing hormone (LH) pulsatility, and relatively decreased follicle stimulating hormone contribute to its pathogenesis. HA reduces inhibition of GnRH pulse frequency by progesterone, causing rapid LH pulse secretion and increasing ovarian androgen production. The origins of persistently rapid GnRH secretion are unknown but appear to evolve during puberty. Obese girls are at risk for HA and develop increased LH pulse frequency with elevated mean LH by late puberty. However, even early pubertal girls with HA have increased LH pulsatility and enhanced daytime LH pulse secretion, indicating the abnormalities may begin early in puberty. Decreasing sensitivity to progesterone may regulate normal maturation of LH secretion, potentially related to normally increasing levels of testosterone during puberty. This change in sensitivity may become exaggerated in girls with HA. Many girls with HA-especially those with hyperinsulinemia-do not exhibit normal LH pulse sensitivity to progesterone inhibition. Thus, HA may adversely affect LH pulse regulation during pubertal maturation leading to persistent HA and the development of PCOS.  相似文献   

15.
Exposure of Atlantic croaker (Micropogonias undulatus) to the polychlorinated biphenyl mixture (Aroclor 1254, PCB; 1 mg/kg body wt/day for 30 days) during the early-recrudescence phase of the gonadal cycle results in the impairment of LH secretion and gonadal growth. In order to determine whether impairment was due to disruption of the stimulatory GnRH neuroendocrine pathway, we compared various parameters of the GnRH-LH system in early recrudescing vs. spermiating (mature) fish. Seabream GnRH (GnRH) content in the preoptic anterior hypothalamic area (POAH) and pituitary, pituitary GnRH receptor concentrations, and basal and GnRH analog (GnRHa)-induced LH secretion were significantly higher in gonadally mature croaker compared to early-recrudescing fish. In a subsequent experiment, the effects of PCB on the same neuroendocrine indices were investigated during the gonadal recrudescence phase of croaker. PCB exposure during the period of testicular maturation prevented the natural increase in GnRH content in the POAH but not in the pituitary. This finding suggests that PCB may impair GnRH synthesis in the POAH. The number of pituitary GnRH receptors also remained significantly lower in the PCB-exposed group, which was likely due to an impairment of GnRH release. The GnRH content in the POAH, number of pituitary GnRH receptors, and LH secretion in the PCB-exposed group were comparable to those in early-recrudescing fish, suggesting an impairment of normal maturation of the GnRH-LH system during the gonadal recrudescence phase. This impairment may be due to a direct action of PCB on GnRH neurons and/or indirectly via interference with other neurotransmitter pathways that modulate GnRH function.  相似文献   

16.
Progesterone secretion has been observed to be episodic in the late luteal phase of the oestrous cycle of ewes and is apparently independent of luteinizing hormone (LH). This study investigated the effects of suppressing the pulsatile release of LH in the early or late luteal phase on the episodic secretion of progesterone. Six Scottish Blackface ewes were treated i.m. with 1 mg kg-1 body weight of a potent gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist on either day 4 or day 11 of the luteal phase. Six ewes received saline at each time and acted as controls. Serial blood samples were collected at 10 or 15 min intervals between 0 and 8 h, 24 and 32 h, and 48 and 56 h after GnRH antagonist treatment and daily from oestrus (day 0) of the treatment cycle for 22 days. Oestrous behaviour was determined using a vasectomized ram present throughout the experiment. Progesterone secretion was episodic in both the early and late luteal phase with a frequency of between 1.6 and 3.2 pulses in 8 h. The GnRH antagonist abolished the pulsatile secretion and suppressed the basal concentrations of LH for at least 3 days after treatment. This suppression of LH, in either the early or late luteal phase, did not affect the episodic release of progesterone. Daily concentrations of progesterone in plasma showed a minimal reduction on days 11 to 14 after GnRH antagonist treatment on day 4, although this was significant (P < 0.05) only on days 11 and 13. There was no effect of treatment on day 11 on daily progesterone concentration, and the timing of luteolysis and the duration of corpus luteum function was unaffected by GnRH antagonist treatment on either day 4 or day 11. These results indicate that the episodic secretion of progesterone during the luteal phase of the oestrous cycle in ewes is independent of LH pulses and normal progesterone secretion by the corpus luteum can be maintained with minimal basal concentrations of LH.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Administering gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) improved conception rates in our previous studies. Our objective was to determine if the effect of GnRH was mediated through serum luteinizing hormone (LH) and/or by altered secretion of serum progesterone (P) and estradiol-17 beta (E) during the periestrual and post-insemination periods. Cattle were given either GnRH (n = 54) or saline (n = 55) at 72 h and inseminated artificially (AI) 80 h after the second of two injections of either prostaglandin F2 alpha or its analog, cloprostenol. Progesterone and E were measured in blood serum collected during 3 wk after AI (estrus) from 60 females. Blood was collected for LH determinations via indwelling jugular cannulae from 14 cows and 11 heifers. Collections were taken every 4 h from 32 to 108 h after the second PGF injection (PGF-2) (periestrual period) and at more frequent intervals during 240 min after administration of GnRH (n = 18) or saline (n = 7). Ten females had a spontaneous preovulatory LH surge before GnRH treatment (GnRH-spontaneous), whereas GnRH induced the preovulatory LH surge in six females. A spontaneous LH surge appeared to be initiated in two heifers at or near the time of GnRH treatment (spontaneous and/or induced). The remaining seven cows had spontaneous LH surges with no subsequent change in LH after saline treatment. Serum P during the 21 days after estrus was lower (p less than 0.05) in both pregnant and nonpregnant (open) cattle treated previously with GnRH compared with saline. Serum P during the first week after estrus was greater (p less than 0.01) and increased (p less than 0.05) more rapidly in saline controls and in GnRH-spontaneous cattle than in those exhibiting GnRH-induced or GnRH-spontaneous and/or-induced surges of LH. Conception rate of cattle receiving GnRH was higher (p = 0.06) than that of saline-treated controls. These data suggest that GnRH treatment at insemination initiated the preovulatory LH surge in some cattle, but serum P in both pregnant and open cows was compromised during the luteal phase after GnRH treatment. Improved fertility may be associated with delayed or slowly rising concentrations of serum progesterone after ovulation.  相似文献   

19.
The roles of the pulsatile release of LH in the functional development and maintenance of the corpus luteum (CL) during the estrus cycle in the goat were examined using a potent GnRH antagonist. In Experiment 1, to assess the inhibitory effects of the GnRH antagonist on the release of LH during the estrus cycle, 9 goats were divided into 3 groups. Goats in Group I received only saline on Days 0 (day of ovulation), 5, 10 and 15. Goats in Group II received the GnRH antagonist (50 microg/kg, s.c.) on the days mentioned for Group I to inhibit endogenous LH during the periods of luteal development and maintenance. Goats in Group III received saline on Days 0 and 5 and then the GnRH antagonist on Days 10 and 15 to inhibit LH during the period of luteal maintenance. Serial blood sampling took place on Days 1, 3, 5, 8, 13 and 18 to characterize the LH pulses. The LH pulses were observed throughout the estrus cycle in Group I but were completely abolished in Group II. In Group III, the pulsatile release of LH was observed from Day 1 to 8, but the LH pulses were completely abolished on Days 13 and 18. In Experiment 2, 16 goats were divided into the same 3 groups as in Experiment 1 to examine the effects of the GnRH antagonist on the luteal function. The concentration of progesterone in the plasma in Group I increased after ovulation, reached a maximum level around Day 12, and subsequently returned to the basal level on Day 17. The concentrations of progesterone in Group II rose after ovulation, but reached a plateau around Day 6 and maintained the level up to Day 9, then rapidly decreased from Day 9 to 10 to the basal level. The concentrations of progesterone in Group II were lower on Days 7 to 15 than those in Group I (P<0.01). The concentrations of progesterone in Group III increased after ovulation, reached a maximum level around Day 8, then dropped from Day 10 to 13 to the basal level. The concentrations of progesterone in Group III on Days 11 to 15 were lower than those in Group I (P<0.05 on Day 11, P<0.01 on Days 12 to 15). These results demonstrate that endogenous LH is essential for normal development and maintenance of the CL function during the estrus cycle in the goat. Further, this study suggests that while the functional maintenance of the caprine CL depends entirely on LH support, such functional dependence during early CL development is only partial.  相似文献   

20.
Estradiol (E(2)) acts as a potent feedback molecule between the ovary and hypothalamic GnRH neurons, and exerts both positive and negative regulatory actions on GnRH synthesis and secretion. However, the extent to which these actions are mediated by estrogen receptors (ERs) expressed in GnRH neurons has been controversial. In this study, Single-cell RT-PCR revealed the expression of both ERalpha and ERbeta isoforms in cultured fetal and adult rat hypothalamic GnRH neurons. Both ERalpha and ERbeta or individual ERs were expressed in 94% of cultured fetal GnRH neurons. In adult female rats at diestrus, 68% of GnRH neurons expressed ERs, followed by 54% in estrus and 19% in proestrus. Expression of individual ERs was found in 24% of adult male GnRH neurons. ERalpha exerted marked G(i)-mediated inhibitory effects on spontaneous action potential (AP) firing, cAMP production, and pulsatile GnRH secretion, indicating its capacity for negative regulation of GnRH neuronal function. In contrast, increased E(2) concentration and ERbeta agonists increase the rate of AP firing, GnRH secretion, and cAMP production, consistent with ERbeta-dependent positive regulation of GnRH secretion. Consonant with the coupling of ERalpha to pertussis toxin-sensitive G(i/o) proteins, E(2) also activates G protein-activated inwardly rectifying potassium channels, decreasing membrane excitability and slowing the firing of spontaneous APs in hypothalamic GnRH neurons. These findings demonstrate that the dual actions of E(2) on GnRH neuronal membrane excitability, cAMP production, and GnRH secretion are mediated by the dose-dependent activation of ERalpha and ERbeta expressed in hypothalamic GnRH neurons.  相似文献   

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