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1.
Steroid feedback inhibition of pulsatile secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone in the ewe 总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5
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
2.
Seasonal changes in pulsatile luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion in ovariectomized ewes were examined over the course of 2 yr in relation to annual changes in environmental photoperiod, shifts in response to estradiol negative feedback control of LH secretion, and timing of the breeding season. Under natural environmental conditions, the frequency of LH pulses in individual ovariectomized ewes changed gradually and in close association with the annual cycle of day length. As days became shorter in late summer and autumn, LH pulse frequency increased; conversely, as day length increased in late winter and spring, frequency declined. Under artificial conditions in which ovariectomized ewes were exposed to different photoperiods, a similar inverse relationship was observed between day length and LH pulse frequency. The seasonal changes in frequency of LH pulses in ovariectomized ewes, although symmetric with the annual photoperiodic cycle, were not temporally coupled to the dramatic shifts in response to estradiol feedback inhibition of LH secretion at the transitions between breeding season and anestrus. The feedback shifts occurred abruptly and at times when LH pulse frequency in ovariectomized ewes was at, or near, the annual maximum or minimum. The tight coupling between LH pulse frequency and photoperiod leads to the conclusion that there is a photoperiodic drive to the LH pulse-generating system of the ewe. The temporal dissociation between changes in this photoperiodic drive and the seasonal shifts in response to estradiol negative feedback support the hypothesis that the neuroendocrine basis for these two phenomena is not one and the same. 相似文献
3.
We charted the development of pulsatile luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion as a function of the time elapsed after removal of the testes. On seven occasions between the moment of castration and 80 days afterwards, we obtained consecutive blood samples at frequent (2.5- to 5-min) intervals from cannulated male rats. Orchidectomy increased both the amplitude and frequency of LH release within 1 day after surgery. Amplitude: From 19 h through 80 days postcastration, peak LH levels rose steadily, and LH pulses grew progressively more pronounced in nadir-to-peak amplitude. Frequency: Our findings offer new evidence establishing an increase in LH pulse frequency from less than 1 per h to 2-3 per h within 1 day after orchidectomy. Once deprived of testicular influences, the frequency of pulsatile LH discharges remained static through 80 days. The sudden onset (less than 1 day after castration) and temporal uniformity of high-frequency LH pulses demonstrate that LH release is governed by an intrinsic, 20- to 30-min neural periodicity in castrate rats. Most important, these findings imply that the testes mask or modulate the expression of an intrinsic, 20- to 30-min neural generator directing the periodic discharge of LH in the intact male rat. 相似文献
4.
5.
In the ewe, seasonal anestrus appears to result from two effects of inhibitory photoperiod: 1) estradiol gains the capacity to suppress luteinizing hormone (LH) pulse frequency and hence becomes a potent inhibitor of tonic LH secretion and 2) a steroid-independent decrease in LH pulse frequency occurs in ovariectomized ewes. In this study, we have obtained evidence, using pentobarbital anesthesia, that both these actions of photoperiod reflect the activation, in anestrus, of an inhibitory neural system. Administration of pentobarbital to intact anestrous ewes produced a dramatic, 3-fold increase in LH pulse frequency during the 6 h of anesthesia. In contrast, during the breeding season, pentobarbital inhibited LH pulse frequency in luteal phase animals. There was also a seasonal variation in the effects of pentobarbital in ovariectomized ewes. During the breeding season this drug again suppressed LH secretion, inhibiting both LH pulse amplitude and frequency. In anestrus, pentobarbital also suppressed pulse amplitude, but it produced a transitory increase (lasting 3 h) in pulse frequency. To account for the stimulatory actions of pentobarbital, we propose that in anestrus, but not the breeding season, LH pulse frequency is held in check by a set of estradiol-sensitive inhibitory neurons. Further, we suggest that these neurons are activated by inhibitory photoperiod and account for both the steroid-dependent and steroid-independent actions of photoperiod. 相似文献
6.
Hypothalamic regulation of luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion and ovarian function were investigated in beef heifers by infusing LH-releasing hormone (LHRH) in a pulsatile manner (1 microgram/ml; 1 ml during 1 min every h) into the external jugular vein of 10 hypophysial stalk-transected (HST) animals. The heifers were HST approximately 30 mo earlier. All heifers had increased ovarian size during the LHRH infusion. The maximum ovarian size (16 +/- 2.7 cm3) was greater (P less than 0.01) than the initial ovarian size (8 +/- 1.4 cm3). Ovarian follicular growth occurred in 4 of 10 HST heifers in response to pulsatile LHRH infusion. In 2 heifers, an ovarian follicle developed to preovulatory size, but ovulation occurred in only 1 animal after the frequency of LHRH was increased (1 microgram every 20 min during 8 h). In blood samples obtained at 20-min intervals every 5th day, LH concentrations in peripheral serum remained consistently low (0.9 ng/ml) and nonepisodic in the 10 HST heifers during infusion of vehicle on the day before beginning LHRH. In 7 of 10 HST animals, episodic LH secretion occurred in response to pulsatile infusion of LHRH. In 3 of these long-term HST heifers, however, serum LH remained at basal levels and the isolated pituitary seemingly was unresponsive to pulsatile infusion of LHRH as indicated by sequential patterns of gonadotropin secretion obtained at 5-day intervals. These results indicate that pulsatile infusion of LHRH induces LH release in HST beef heifers. 相似文献
7.
Orexin-A suppresses the pulsatile secretion of luteinizing hormone via beta-endorphin 总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5
Irahara M Tamura T Matuzaki T Saito S Yasui T Yamano S Kamada M Aono T 《Biochemical and biophysical research communications》2001,281(1):232-236
Orexins, the novel hypothalamic neuropeptides that stimulate feeding behavior, have been shown to suppress the pulsatile secretion of LH in ovariectomized rats. However, the mechanism of this action is still not clear. We examined the effect of naloxone, a specific opioid antagonist, on the suppression of the pulsatile secretion of LH by orexins to determine whether beta-endorphin is involved in this suppressive effect. We administered orexins intracerebroventricularly and injected naloxone intravenously in ovariectomized rats, and we measured the serum LH concentration to analyze the pulsatile secretion. Administration of orexin-A significantly reduced the mean LH concentration and the pulse frequency, but coadministration of naloxone significantly restored the mean LH concentration and the pulse frequency. Administration of orexin-B also significantly reduced the mean LH concentration and the pulse frequency, and coadministration of naloxone did not restore them. These results indicate that orexin-A, but not orexin-B, suppresses GnRH secretion via beta-endorphin. 相似文献
8.
Veldhuis JD Bowers CY 《American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology》2011,301(4):R1143-R1152
Although stimulatory (feedforward) and inhibitory (feedback) dynamics jointly control neurohormone secretion, the factors that supervise feedback restraint are poorly understood. To parse the regulation of growth hormone (GH) escape from negative feedback, 25 healthy men and women were studied eight times each during an experimental GH feedback clamp. The clamp comprised combined bolus infusion of GH or saline and continuous stimulation by saline GH-releasing hormone (GHRH), GHRP-2, or both peptides after randomly ordered supplementation with placebo (both sexes) vs. E(2) (estrogen; women) and T (testosterone; men). Endpoints were GH pulsatility and entropy (a model-free measure of feedback quenching). Gender determined recovery of pulsatile GH secretion from negative feedback in all four secretagog regimens (0.003 ≤ P ≤ 0.017 for women>men). Peptidyl secretagog controlled the mass, number, and duration of feedback-inhibited GH secretory bursts (each, P < 0.001). E(2)/T administration potentiated both pulsatile (P = 0.006) and entropic (P < 0.001) modes of GH recovery. IGF-I positively predicted the escape of GH secretory burst number and mode (P = 0.022), whereas body mass index negatively forecast GH secretory burst number and mass (P = 0.005). The composite of gender, body mass index, E(2), IGF-I, and peptidyl secretagog strongly regulates the escape of pulsatile and entropic GH secretion from autonegative feedback. The ensemble factors identified in this preclinical investigation enlarge the dynamic model of GH control in humans. 相似文献
9.
Experiments were performed to characterize the pulsatile patterns of circulating luteinizing hormone (LH) in the middle-aged ovariectomized (OVX) rat. Frequent blood samples were taken from OVX rats at 6, 7-8, and 9-10 mo of age, and LH was measured by radioimmunoassay. Rats had been OVX either 2 wk (STO) or 10-20 wk (LTO) previously. Mean LH levels were significantly lower with increasing age, reflecting effects on both pulse amplitude and pulse frequency. Mean LH levels were higher in LTO than STO groups, reflecting primarily an increase in pulse amplitude, but there was also a small, significant decrease in pulse frequency with increased time following OVX. In a second experiment, a random selection of the rats in the STO groups was tested again 10 wk after OVX. A significantly higher number of 9- to 10-mo-old rats had pulsatile patterns at 10 wk than at 2 wk following OVX. Furthermore, mean plasma LH concentrations were higher in all three groups. We conclude that decreases in several parameters of LH secretion are seen in middle-aged OVX rats, at the time when irregularities are first seen in the estrous cycle in the intact rat. 相似文献
10.
J M Kaufman J P Deslypere M Giri A Vermeulen 《The Journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology》1990,37(3):421-430
Leydig cell function is driven by LH, secreted in a pulsatile manner by the anterior pituitary in response to episodic discharge of hypothalamic LHRH into the pituitary portal circulation, under control of a yet to be defined neural mechanism, the "hypothalamic LHRH pulse generator". The normal aging process in elderly men is accompanied by a decline in Leydig cell function. Whereas primary testicular factors undoubtedly play an important role in the decrease of circulating (free) testosterone levels with age, recent studies demonstrated that aging also affects the central compartment of the neuroendocrine cascade. Hypothalamic alterations comprise changes in the regulation of the frequency of the LHRH pulse generator with an inappropriately low frequency relative to the prevailing androgen impregnation and opioid tone, and with an increased sensitivity to retardation of the LHRH pulse generator by androgens. As observed by some authors in basal conditions and by others after endocrine manipulations. LH pulse amplitude seems also to be reduced in elderly men as compared to young subjects. This is most probably the consequence of a reduction in the amount of LHRH released by the hypothalamus. Indeed, challenge of the gonadotropes with low, close to physiological doses of LHRH in young and elderly men reveals no alterations in pituitary responsiveness when looking at either the response for immunoreactive LH or bioactive LH. Deconvolution analysis on data obtained after low-dose LHRH suggests a markedly prolonged plasma half-life of LH in elderly men, a finding which may explain the paradoxical increase of mean LH levels in face of the reduced or unchanged frequency and amplitude of LH pulses. 相似文献
11.
To assess the role of testosterone (T) in regulating the minute-to-minute release of pulsatile luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion in the adult male rat, we investigated the negative feedback of acute increases in plasma T concentrations on pulsatile LH secretion in acutely castrated male rats. At the time of castration, we implanted T-filled Silastic capsules, s.c., which maintained plasma T concentrations at approximately 1.8 ng/ml and suppressed LH pulses. On the next day, the capsules were removed; blood sampling (every 6 min) was started 8 h after implant removal, thereby allowing LH pulses to be reinitiated. Immediately following a control bleeding interval of 2 h, either T or vehicle alone was infused s.c., and blood sampling continued for another 4 h. In animals receiving vehicle alone, LH pulse frequency and mean LH levels increased over the 6 h bleeding period. The administration of 200 ng T/min caused a rapid rise in plasma T concentrations of about 4 ng/ml ("physiological") and prevented the increase in pulse frequency that occurred in the control group; it did not, however, reduce pulse frequency over the 4 h infusion period. When T was infused at the rate of 400 ng/ml, plasma T concentrations rose to approximately 18 ng/ml ("supraphysiological") and LH pulse frequency was significantly reduced, but not completely inhibited, during the last 2 h of the infusion. The pulse amplitude of luteinizing hormone did not change significantly in any of the groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 相似文献
12.
The effect of the new opioid antagonist naltrexone-estrone azine (EH-NX) on pituitary luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion in the ovariectomized rat was studied. EH-NX is a hybrid between the steroid component estrone and the opioid antagonist naltrexone (NX). It is a potent and long-acting opioid antagonist in vitro and in vivo, but its effect upon in vivo LH secretion has not been tested before. The aims of the study were to investigate whether, unlike naltrexone, EH-NX can stimulate LH secretion without the need of additional estrogen pretreatment and whether EH-NX has peripheral estrogenic effects upon the uterine weight, when administered chronically to long-term ovariectomized rats. Female rats were injected subcutaneously with EH-NX 21 days after ovariectomy. The effects of EH-NX injections on LH secretion were compared to the effects of NX and estrone hydrazone (EH) alone, or in combination, with or without estradiol-benzoate (EB) pretreatment. Inhibition of LH secretion and uterine proliferation were observed in rats treated chronically with EH-NX in dosages of 0.250 mg/kg bw and higher. These effects were similar to those caused by EH and EB. In short-term OVX rats EH-NX appeared to act faster than EH. In contrast to NX, no stimulatory effect on LH secretion was seen with EH-NX in EB primed OVX rats. These results surprisingly demonstrate that EH-NX behaves like an estrogen and not like an opioid antagonist. The unexpected pharmacological profile of this new drug may open up doors for several medical applications. 相似文献
13.
Thirty-two ovariectomized cows were used to determine the time course for the negative feedback effect of estradiol-17beta (E) on secretion of the luteinizing hormone (LH). The cows were injected with gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH; 40 mug) 2.5 or 5 h after pretreatment with E (1 mug/kg body weight) or with a vehicle for control (C). Pretreatment with E resulted in lower serum concentrations of LH at 2.5 h (0.27 vs 0.90 ng/ml; P < 0.01) and at 5 h (0.27 vs 0.67 ng/ml; P < 0.01); less LH was released in response to GnRH at 2.5 h after treatment compared to cows treated with C (10 +/- 4.9 vs 27 +/- 3.8 ng/ml; P < 0.001). However, when GnRH was administered 5 h after E or C, there was no difference in the total amount of LH released (34 +/- 1.8 vs 26 +/- 4.4 ng/ml; P > 0.2). Time to half area (estimate of decay for the induced surge of LH) was longer for cows treated with E when compared to those treated with C (1.3 vs 0.9 h, P < 0.001; 1.5 vs 0.8 h, P < 0.001). Time to half area was not affected by the time of administration of GnRH after E (P > 0.4). These results suggest that E acts in the pituitary to cause the initial decrease in concentrations of LH. Pituitaries in animals pretreated with E regained the capacity to release as much LH at 5 h after treatment as those treated with C at a time when LH concentrations were still suppressed by E. Thus, the hypothalamus or an extra-hypothalamic area may be involved in maintaining the suppression of LH secretion after the initial effect on the pituitary has declined. 相似文献
14.
Reduced pulsatile luteinizing hormone and testosterone secretion with aging in the male rat 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
To identify possible age-dependent changes in the feedback relationship between the brain-pituitary and testes, we examined the minute-to-minute patterns of plasma luteinizing hormone (LH) and testosterone (T) in intact, young male rats and compared these profiles to those of old animals. Young (3 mo; n = 11) and old (22 mo; n = 12) Sprague-Dawley rats were fitted with indwelling venous catheters and between 24 and 48 h later, were bled without anesthesia, by remote sampling, at 10-min intervals for 8 h. Blood samples of 400 microliter were withdrawn, and an equivalent volume of a blood replacement mixture was infused after each sample. Plasma LH and T levels in each sample were measured by radioimmunoassay (RIA). Plasma T levels in old animals failed to show the transient oscillations observed in young animals. Mean plasma T levels were 50% lower in old compared to young animals (P less than 0.001). Plasma patterns of LH in old animals, like their younger counterparts, showed statistically significant episodic increases, whose apparent pulse frequency was inappropriately low for their circulating T level (although not statistically different from the young group). Pulse amplitude in the old animals was 66% lower in the old compared to the young group (P less than 0.015). We conclude that age-associated alterations in brain mechanisms governing LH secretion underline these endocrine changes. 相似文献
15.
Opioidergic control of luteinizing hormone release in the female rabbit: influence of ovariectomy and steroid replacement on pulsatile secretion 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The influence of ovariectomy and steroid replacement on naloxone-induced changes in pulsatile secretion of luteinizing hormone (LH) in the female rabbit was examined. Blood samples were taken every 5 min through an indwelling catheter in the rabbit ear artery, and plasma was stored until assayed for LH by established radioimmunoassay procedures. In the intact animal, saline injection had no effect on LH secretion. Although naloxone (10 mg/kg) caused a 7-fold increase in mean LH pulse amplitude by 30 min after injection, this increase was not statistically significant because 5 of 11 animals did not respond. In animals ovariectomized 48 h previously, naloxone significantly increased LH concentration by 194% at 23 min after injection. When long-term ovariectomized rabbits were treated with estradiol benzoate and then were given naloxone, no significant increase in LH was observed, although many animals did respond. Treatment of long-term ovariectomized rabbits with 1 microgram estradiol benzoate and 100 micrograms progesterone or 1 mg testosterone propionate on Days 1 and 3 and naloxone on Day 4 resulted in a significant increase in LH 19-24 min later. Although there was an increase in pulse amplitude, no change was detected in pulse frequency after naloxone. These data suggest that the hypothesis of steroid-opioid coupling in the control of LH secretion is not applicable to the female rabbit. 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.
M L Day K Imakawa M Garcia-Winder D D Zalesky B D Schanbacher R J Kittok J E Kinder 《Biology of reproduction》1984,31(2):332-341
The hypothesis that luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion in prepubertal females is responsive to estradiol negative feedback and that decreased feedback occurs as puberty approaches was tested in heifers. In the first experiment, seven heifers were maintained prepubertal by dietary energy restriction until 508 days of age (Day 0). All heifers were placed on a high-energy diet on Day 0 at which time they received no additional treatment (CONT), were ovariectomized (OVX) or were ovariectomized and subcutaneously implanted with estradiol-17 beta (OVX-E2). This feeding regimen was used to synchronize reproductive state in all heifers. A second experiment was performed with 16 prepubertal heifers using the same treatments at 266 days (Day 0) of age (CONT, OVX and OVX-E2) but no dietary intake manipulation. In both experiments, LH secretion increased rapidly following ovariectomy in OVX heifers. In the initial experiment, LH secretion was maintained at a low level in OVX-E2 heifers until a synchronous rapid increase was noted coincidental with puberty in the CONT heifer. In the second experiment, LH secretion increased gradually in OVX-E2 heifers and attained castrate levels coincidental with puberty in CONT heifers. A gradual increase in LH secretion occurred as puberty approached in CONT heifers. These results indicate that: a) LH secretion in prepubertal heifers is responsive to estradiol negative feedback; and b) estradiol negative feedback decreases during the prepubertal period in beef heifers. 相似文献
18.
B D Schanbacher 《Biology of reproduction》1985,33(3):603-611
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
19.
A I Mahmoud F N Thompson D D Peck K M Mizinga L S Leshin L A Rund J A Stuedemann T E Kiser 《Biology of reproduction》1989,41(3):431-437
In three experiments, we examined endogenous opioid inhibition of luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion during the bovine estrous cycle. An increase in serum LH in response to the opioid antagonist naloxone (Na; 1 mg/kg i.v.) was the criterion for opioid inhibition. Estrous cycles were synchronized via prostaglandin administration. In Experiment 1, mean serum LH was not different during the luteal phase in yearling heifers (n = 6/group) at Hour 1 after Nal (2.1 ng/ml) compared to controls (1.8 ng/ml). However, LH peak amplitude was increased (p less than 0.05) in the Nal compared to the control group. Serum LH was increased (p less than 0.01) during the follicular phase in heifers at Hour 1 post-Nal compared to controls (4.7 and 3.5 ng/ml, respectively). Again, Nal administration was followed by increased (p less than 0.05) LH pulse amplitude compared to control. In Experiment 2, no effect of Nal upon serum LH was detected in cows (n = 9) during proestrus, metestrus, midluteal and late luteal portions of the estrous cycle. In Experiment 3, the LH response to Nal was examined simultaneously in yearling heifers and cows (n = 5/group) during the luteal and follicular phases. Serum LH increased (p less than 0.001) during Hour 1 post-Nal in heifers compared to cows during the follicular (3.4 vs. 1.7 ng/ml) but not during the luteal phase. LH pulse amplitude also increased (p less than 0.05) during Hour 1 post-Nal in heifers compared to cows during the luteal (2.5 vs. 1.1 ng/nl and follicular (2.5 vs. 1.3 ng/ml) phases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 相似文献
20.
A sustained volley of high-frequency pulses of GnRH secretion is a fundamental step in the sequence of neuroendocrine events leading to ovulation during the breeding season of sheep. In the present study, the pattern of GnRH secretion into pituitary portal blood was examined in ewes during both the breeding and anestrous seasons, with a focus on determining whether the absence of ovulation during the nonbreeding season is associated with the lack of a sustained increase in pulsatile GnRH release. During the breeding season, separate groups (n = 5) of ovary-intact ewes were sampled during the midluteal phase of the estrous cycle and following the withdrawal of progesterone (removal of progesterone implants) to synchronize onset of the follicular phase. During the nonbreeding season, another two groups (n = 5) were sampled either in the absence of hormonal treatments or following withdrawal of progesterone. Pituitary portal and jugular blood for measurement of GnRH and LH, respectively, were sampled every 10 min for 6 h during the breeding season or for 12 h in anestrus. During the breeding season, mean frequency of episodic GnRH release was 1.4 pulses/6 h in luteal-phase ewes; frequency increased to 7.8 pulses/6 h during the follicular phase (following progesterone withdrawal). In marked contrast, GnRH pulse frequency was low (mean less than 1 pulse/6 h) in both groups of anestrous ewes (untreated and following progesterone withdrawal), but GnRH pulse amplitude exceeded that in both luteal and follicular phases of the estrous cycle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 相似文献