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1.
This study determined whether changes in nutrition during development alter LH secretion in males in a manner similar to that in females; sheep were used as an experimental model. Studies were conducted in the absence of gonadal steroid negative feedback. First, we compared the effect of chronic growth restriction on LH secretion in male and female lambs. Second, we determined whether the gonadotropic response to acute increases and decreases in nutrition is sexually differentiated. Seven male and 8 female Suffolk lambs, gonadectomized, and weaned by 8 wk of age were maintained at a target weight of 20 kg by level of nutrition. After 7 wk of chronic low nutrition (15 wk of age), LH pulse frequency was equally low in males (2.0 +/- 0.7 pulses/4 h) and females (2.0 +/- 0.4 pulses/4 h) relative to that (ca. hourly pulses) in normally growing gonadectomized lambs. Seven weeks later, at 22 wk of age, LH pulse frequency dropped further (males 0.9 +/- 0.3/4 h; females 0.9 +/- 0.4 pulses/4 h). The results of this first experiment, in which we observed no sex difference in gonadotropin secretion under chronic growth restriction, imply equal neuroendocrine sensitivity in males and females to long-term low nutrition. In the second experiment, however, a sex difference was evident in the response to increased and decreased nutrition. Both sexes responded to feeding ad libitum with a rapid increase in LH pulse frequency, but the response was greater in the males than in the females.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
In Exp. 1, the changes in pulsatile LH secretion at the onset of the breeding season were observed in 20 intact, mature Saanen does. Blood was sampled every 20 min for 6 h each week from the beginning of August until the onset of ovulatory activity, as evidenced by cycles in plasma progesterone. The first doe ovulated at the end of August and all were cycling by the end of September. As the first ovulation approached, LH pulse frequency increased by 67% and mean levels of LH increased by 47%. These changes were progressive rather than abrupt. In Exp. 2, seasonal changes in the inhibition of pulsatile LH secretion by ovarian steroids were studied in ovariectomized Saanen does. The animals were untreated (N = 4) or given subcutaneous oestradiol implants (N = 4) and blood was sampled every 10 min for 6 h, twice during the breeding season and twice during the anoestrous season. In each season, the second series of samples was taken after the animals had been treated with progesterone, administered by intravaginal implants. Season did not significantly affect LH secretion in goats not treated with oestradiol, but LH pulse frequency was 54% lower during the anoestrous season than during the breeding season in oestradiol-treated goats. Mean LH concentrations were affected in the same manner as pulse frequency, but pulse amplitude was increased by oestradiol treatment in both seasons. Progesterone had no detectable effect on LH secretion in either season. In Exp. 3, the response to repeated melatonin injections at a set time after dawn was investigated in 11 oestradiol-treated, ovariectomized goats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Divergent selection has resulted in two lines of lambs (high and low) that have a 5-fold difference in their ability to release luteinizing hormone (LH) in response to 5 micrograms of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH). Baseline gonadotrophin concentrations, the gonadotrophin responses to a GnRH challenge and the concentrations of testosterone and oestradiol were compared in lambs which were castrated at birth and intact lambs from both selection lines at 2, 6, 10 and 20 weeks of age. The pattern of LH and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion was similar in the two lines, but differed between the intact and the castrated lambs. Basal LH and FSH secretion were significantly higher in the castrates than in the intact lambs from both selection lines. The high-line lambs had significantly higher basal FSH concentrations at all ages tested and significantly higher basal LH concentrations during the early postnatal period. The magnitude of the gonadotrophin responses to GnRH differed significantly between the intact and the castrated lambs within each line, the amount of gonadotrophins secreted by the castrated lambs being significantly greater. The removal of gonadal negative feedback by castration did not alter the between-line difference in either LH or the FSH response to the GnRH challenge. Throughout the experimental period, the concentration of testosterone in the intact lambs was significantly greater than in the castrated lambs in both selection lines, but no significant difference was seen in the concentrations of oestradiol. No significant between-line differences were found in the peripheral concentrations of testosterone or oestradiol in the intact lambs from the two selection lines. Therefore, despite similar amounts of gonadal negative feedback in the selection lines, there were significant between-line differences in basal gonadotrophin concentrations, at 2 and 6 weeks of age, and in the LH and FSH responses to an exogenous GnRH challenge, at all ages tested. Removal of gonadal negative feedback did not affect the magnitude of the between-line difference in the response of the lines to GnRH stimulation. The results indicate that the effects of selection on gonadotrophin secretion are primarily at the level of the hypothalamo-pituitary complex.  相似文献   

4.
Neuroendocrine mechanisms regulating luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion during puberty were investigated in intact male ferrets and ferrets castrated at 8 wk of age that received s.c. implants of either empty or testosterone-filled Silastic capsules. To synchronize puberty onset among individuals, ferrets were exposed to short days between 8 and 16 wk of age, and then transferred to long days. Testis growth began in intact ferrets soon after photoperiod transition. Blood samples were obtained at 11, 15, 19, and 23 wk of age. LH pulse frequency was low in intact ferrets at 11 and 15 wk of age (less than or equal to 0.27 pulses/h), but rose to 0.94 pulses/h by 23 wk of age. No age-related increase in LH pulse frequency was observed in untreated castrated ferrets. LH pulses were rare in testosterone-treated castrated ferrets at 11 and 15 wk of age; but by 23 wk of age, frequency rose to 0.33 pulses/h. Thus, testis maturation in ferrets is accompanied by a dramatic increase in LH pulse frequency. No steroid-independent developmental increase in LH pulse frequency occurs in castrated ferrets. Furthermore, doses of testosterone that prevent LH secretion in young castrated ferrets do not as effectively suppress LH pulses in older ferrets. These data suggest that a decrease in the efficacy of testosterone negative feedback mediates the pubertal rise in LH pulse frequency in male ferrets.  相似文献   

5.
Reproductive responses to photoperiod were directly compared in mature ewes and in their spring-born twin female lambs. All females were ovariectomized and treated with oestradiol implants before transfer into artificial photoperiod; serum LH concentrations and pulsatile LH patterns provided an index of neuroendocrine reproductive activity. Mothers were transferred from natural photoperiod to artificial long days (16 h light:8 h dark) at the summer solstice so that no decrease in photoperiod would be experienced. These ewes began reproductive activity synchronously at the expected time in the autumn. One of each pair of twin lambs was treated exactly as the mothers; to determine the normal timing of puberty the remaining twin was maintained in a photoperiod simulating the natural decrease in daylength. In all 6 control lambs experiencing the simulated natural photoperiod, reproductive activity occurred synchronously at 28 +/- 1 weeks of age (2 October +/- 7 days). However, in their twin sisters which did not experience a decrease in photoperiod, only 2 of 6 lambs had begun reproductive activity by the end of the experiment at 52 weeks of age (March), and these were both delayed relative to their twin control lambs exposed to decreasing daylength. Therefore, a decrease in photoperiod is necessary for the normal timing of puberty in the spring-born, female sheep, whereas seasonally anoestrous, mature sheep can enter the breeding season at a normal time in the absence of decreasing photoperiod. We suggest that the requirement for a decreasing photoperiod by the spring-born lamb reflects its limited photoperiodic history as compared to the adult.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of season and of oestradiol and progesterone on the tonic secretion of LH were studied in ovariectomized Merino and Suffolk ewes, two breeds which differ markedly in the seasonal pattern of their reproductive activity. In the absence of exogenous steroids, the frequency of LH pulses was lower and the amplitude of the pulses was higher in anoestrus than in the breeding season for Merino and Suffolk ewes 30 days after ovariectomy. In long-term (190 days) ovariectomized ewes, this seasonal change in LH secretion was observed in Suffolk ewes only. During seasonal anoestrus, treatment of ewes with subcutaneous oestradiol-17 beta implants (3, 6 or 12 mm in length) decreased the frequency of LH pulses in a dose-dependent manner, with Suffolk ewes being far more sensitive to the inhibitory effects of oestradiol than Merino ewes. The lowest dose of oestradiol (3 mm) had no effect on the secretion of LH in Merino ewes, but reduced secretion in Suffolk ewes. Treatment of ewes with the highest dose of oestradiol (12 mm) completely abolished LH pulses in Suffolk ewes, whereas infrequent pulses remained evident in Merino ewes. During the breeding season, oestradiol alone had no effect on the pulsatile release of LH in either breed, but in combination with progesterone there was a significant reduction in LH pulse frequency. Progesterone effectively decreased LH secretion in both breeds in both seasons. It was concluded that differences between breeds in the 'depth' of anoestrus could be related to differences in the sensitivity of the hypothalamus to both negative feedback by oestradiol and the direct effects of photoperiod.  相似文献   

7.
Spring-born crossbred ewe lambs were raised in a natural photoperiod and saline (N = 6) or naloxone (1 mg/kg) in saline (N = 6) was injected (i.m.) every 2 h for 6 h at 5, 10 and 15 weeks of age and for 8 h at 20, 25 and 30 weeks of age. Blood samples were taken every 12 min during treatment periods. Naloxone had no effect on time to first oestrus (controls 235 +/- 6 days, naloxone 242 +/- 7 days). Mean serum LH concentrations and LH pulse frequency were elevated by naloxone in ewe lambs at 20, 25, and 30 weeks of age (P less than 0.05). The only FSH response to naloxone was a depression of mean serum concentrations at 30 weeks of age (P less than 0.05). LH pulse amplitude was elevated at 5 weeks of age in all ewe lambs and declined thereafter to a nadir at 30 weeks of age in control, but not in naloxone-treated animals (P less than 0.05). LH pulse frequency was elevated at 10 weeks of age in control ewe lambs and in all animals at 30 weeks of age (P less than 0.05). FSH pulse frequency declined from 5 weeks of age in control ewe lambs (P less than 0.05), with very few pulses noted in 25- and 30-week-old animals. We conclude that (1) opioidergic suppression of LH, but not FSH, secretion developed at 20 weeks of age in the growing ewe lambs used in the present study, with no obvious change in suppression before the onset of first oestrus: (2) pulsatile FSH secretion occurred in the young ewe lamb but was lost as the lamb matured: (3) attainment of sexual maturity was preceded by an elevation in LH pulse frequency.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of progesterone on the responses of Merino ewes to the introduction of rams during anoestrus were investigated in two experiments. In the first experiment, the introduction of rams induced an increase in the levels of LH in entire ewes. The mean levels increased from 0.68 +/- 0.04 ng/ml (mean +/- s.e.m.) to 4.49 +/- 1.32 ng/ml within 20 min in ewes not treated with progesterone (n = 10). In ewes bearing progesterone implants that provided a peripheral concentration of about 1.5 ng progesterone per millilitre plasma, the LH response to the introduction of rams was not prevented, but was reduced in size so that the concentration was 1.38 +/- 0.15 ng/ml after 20 min (n = 5). Progesterone treatment begun either 2 days before or 6 h after the introduction of rams and maintained for 4 days prevented ovulation. In the second experiment ovariectomized ewes were used to investigate further the mechanism by which the ram evoked increases in tonic LH secretion. In ovariectomized ewes treated with oestradiol implants, the introduction of rams increased the frequency of the LH pulses and the basal level of LH. In the absence of oestradiol there was no significant change in pulse frequency but a small increase in basal levels. Progesterone again did not prevent but reduced the responses in ewes treated with oestradiol. It is suggested that following the withdrawal of progesterone treatment, the secretion of LH pulses in response to the ram effect would be dampened. This effect could be a component of the reported long delay between the introduction of rams and the preovulatory surge of LH in ewes treated with progesterone. Continued progesterone treatment prevented ovulation, probably by blocking positive feedback by oestradiol.  相似文献   

9.
In this study, we monitored episodic luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion throughout development in eight April-born ewe lambs to determine if a change in LH pulse patterns preceded first ovulation at puberty. LH pulses were measured in samples collected every 12 min for 6 h once in July, twice a month from 22 August to 2 October, and then weekly until puberty. Progesterone concentrations, measured in samples taken 3/wk, were used as an index of first ovulation, which occurred at 29.3 +/- 0.7 wk of age. LH pulse frequencies throughout most of this period ranged from 0 to 2 pulses/6 h, with no change over time. However, during the week prior to the first progesterone rise, there was a significant increase in pulse frequency to a level seen during the follicular phase in post-pubertal lambs. This increase in pulse frequency was evident in 7 of 8 lambs; pulses were not analyzed in the last lamb because samples were taken during the LH surge. In contrast, LH pulse amplitude did not increase prior to puberty. In fact, pulse amplitude declined linearly during the 3 wk before first ovulation and then increased during the follicular phase in post-pubertal animals. These results support the hypothesis that an increase in the frequency of episodic LH secretion is a key event leading to the onset of ovarian cycles in the lamb. Whether an increase in pulse amplitude is also necessary remains unclear. If so, it must occur just before the LH surge, since it was not detected in any samples taken before puberty in this study.  相似文献   

10.
Active immunization against inhibin has been shown to advance puberty and increase ovulation rate in ewe lambs; but in ram lambs, effects on puberty and sperm production are equivocal. The objective of the present study was to determine whether active immunization against an inhibin alpha-subunit peptide advances the onset of puberty in ram lambs. St. Croix hair sheep ram lambs were assigned to inhibin-immunized (n = 7) and control (n = 8) treatment groups. Lambs in the inhibin-immunized group were immunized against a synthetic peptide-carrier protein conjugate, alpha-(1-25)-human alpha-globulin (halpha-G), and control lambs were immunized against halpha-G. Lambs were immunized at 3, 7, 13, 19, 25, 31, and 37 weeks of age. On the day of immunization a blood sample was collected and lambs were weighed. Another blood sample was collected 1 week following each immunization. At 20 weeks of age additional blood samples were collected at 20 min intervals for 8h. Beginning at 20 weeks of age and at weekly intervals thereafter, scrotal circumference (SC) was measured and semen was collected using electroejaculation. A subsequent ejaculate was collected 1 week following onset of puberty, which was defined as the week of age when an ejaculate first contained > or =50 x 10(6) sperm cells. In control lambs, plasma alpha-(1-25)-antibody (Ab) was nondetectable. In inhibin-immunized lambs, alpha-(1-25)-Ab titer increased from 7 to 25 weeks of age and then plateaued at a level that varied (P<0.001) among animals. Body weight and SC of control and inhibin-immunized lambs were similar at the onset of puberty. At pubertal onset inhibin-immunized lambs were older than control lambs (31.9+/-0.5 vs. 29.5+/-0.7 weeks of age, P<0.05). Plasma FSH concentrations were similar in control and inhibin-immunized lambs from 3 to 38 weeks of age. Plasma LH levels were lower (P<0.01) in inhibin-immunized than control lambs. During the 8-h blood sampling period at 20 weeks of age, LH and testosterone concentrations were lower (P<0.05) in inhibin-immunized than control ram lambs, and the LH pulse frequency was similar in the two groups of animals. The decreased LH secretion is consistent with the immunoneutralization of a putative inhibin alpha-subunit-related peptide that stimulates LH secretion in ram lambs. Present findings show that active immunization against an inhibin alpha-peptide delays rather than advances puberty in ram lambs.  相似文献   

11.
The initial aim of the present study was to test whether the stress of transport suppresses LH pulsatile secretion in ewes. In a pilot experiment in the late breeding season, transport resulted in an unexpected response in three out of five transported, ovariectomized ewes pretreated with oestradiol and progesterone. Before transport, seasonal suppression of LH pulses had occurred earlier than anticipated, but LH pulsatility suddenly restarted for the period of transport. This finding was reminiscent of unexplained results obtained in ovariectomized ewes infused centrally with high doses of corticotrophin-releasing hormone after pretreatment with low doses of oestradiol with or without progesterone. Hence, an additional aim of the present study was to examine whether these latter results with corticotrophin-releasing hormone could be reproduced by increasing endogenous corticotrophin-releasing hormone secretion by transport. Subsequent experiments used groups of at least eight ovariectomized ewes at different times of the year with or without prior exposure to steroids to assess whether these unexpected observations were associated with season or the prevailing endocrine milieu. In the mid-breeding season, transport for 4 h in the absence of steroid pretreatment for 8 months reduced LH pulse frequency from 7.5 +/- 0.3 to 6.3 +/- 0.4 pulses per 4 h (P < 0.05) and LH pulse amplitude from 2.6 +/- 0.5 to 1.8 +/- 0.3 ng ml-1 (P < 0.05). Similarly, in the mid-breeding season, 34 h after the cessation of pretreatment with oestradiol and progesterone, transport suppressed LH pulse frequency from 6.1 +/- 0.4 to 5.5 +/- 0.3 pulses per 4 h (P < 0.05) with a tendency of effect on amplitude (6.2 +/- 2.7 to 2.61 +/- 0.6 ng ml-1; P = 0.07; note the large variance in the pretransport data). During mid-anoestrus, evidence of a suppressive effect of transport was only observed on LH pulse amplitude (4.7 +/- 0.6 versus 3.0 +/- 0.5 pulses per 4 h; P < 0.05) in ovariectomized ewes that had not been exposed to ovarian steroids for 4 months. Repetition of the pilot experiment with 12 ewes during the transition into anoestrus resulted in one ewe with LH pulses seasonally suppressed but increased by transport; 11 ewes had a distinct pulsatile LH pattern which was decreased by transport in six ewes. In anoestrus, there was no effect of transport on LH pulse frequency or amplitude in intact ewes, or those ovariectomized 2-3 weeks previously, with or without prior oestradiol and progesterone treatment. However, basal concentrations of cortisol were greater in anoestrus than in the breeding season, and the increment in cortisol during transport was similar in anoestrus and the breeding season but greater during the transition into anoestrus (P < 0.05). Progesterone concentrations increased from 0.31 +/- 0.02 ng ml-1 before transport to 0.48 +/- 0.05 ng ml-1 during the second hour of transport (P < 0.05). In conclusion, transport reduced LH pulse frequency and amplitude in ovariectomized ewes that had not been exposed to exogenous steroids for at least 4 months. In most animals, the previously observed increase in LH pulsatility induced by exogenous CRH was not reproduced by increasing endogenous CRH secretion by transport. However, in four ewes, transport did increase LH pulsatility, but only during the transition into anoestrus in ewes with seasonally suppressed LH profiles after withdrawal of steroid pretreatment.  相似文献   

12.
Gonadally intact male ferrets in breeding condition, which received an aromatase inhibitor, 1,4,6-androstatriene-3,17-dione (ATD) s.c. in Silastic capsules, had significantly more LH pulses and higher mean LH concentrations in plasma than did control males implanted with empty capsules. Aromatase activity in the hypothalamus + preoptic area and temporal lobe was strongly suppressed by ATD treatment whereas circulating concentrations of testosterone and oestradiol were not affected. These results suggest that oestradiol, formed via neural aromatization of circulating testosterone, contributes to the feedback regulation of LH secretion in breeding male ferrets just as oestradiol of ovarian origin controls LH secretion in females. No sex difference was observed in the rate at which mean plasma LH concentrations rose after the removal from gonadectomized ferrets of s.c. Silastic capsules containing oestradiol. Daily s.c. injections of oestradiol in oil caused an equivalent, dose-dependent inhibition of LH pulse frequency and mean LH concentrations in plasma of male and female ferrets. These findings suggest that the negative feedback control of pulsatile LH secretion by oestrogen is not sexually differentiated in this reflexly ovulating species. The ferret appears to differ from spontaneously ovulating mammalian species in which the female is generally more sensitive than the male to the inhibitory feedback action of oestradiol on LH secretion.  相似文献   

13.
Male rats given 250 mug oestradiol benzoate by subcutaneous injection on Day 4 of postnatal life showed a marked delay in the onset of the pubertal increase in the weight of the testes and seminal vesicles and in spermatogenesis but not a complete failure of sexual development. The increase in plasma testosterone concentration at puberty was also delayed in oestrogen-treated males but the eventual increase in seminal vesicle weight was closely related in time to the delayed increase in plasma testosterone concentration. Both plasma LH and FSH concentrations were reduced for about 10 days after oestrogen administration as compared to control values. After 22 days of age, plasma LH concentration did not differ significantly from the control values. The plasma FSH concentration of the oestrogen-treated males showed a delayed rise to values equal to or higher than those of controls of the same age. The delayed rise in plasma FSH concentration in the oestrogen treated males preceded the delayed rise in plasma testosterone in these animals. The decrease in plasma FSH concentration from the high prepubertal values to the lower values in adults occurred at different ages in the control and in oestrogen-treated rats but in both groups the decrease occurred as plasma testosterone levels were increasing and the first wave of spermatogenesis was reaching completion. The increase in plasma FSH concentration after castration was reduced in oestrogen-treated males during the period throughout which FSH levels in the intact animals were subnormal but the levels in oestrogen-treated males castrated after the delayed rise in FSH had occurred did not differ from control values. It is suggested that the delayed sexual maturation of male rats treated with high doses of oestrogen in the neonatal period is related principally to abnormalities in the secretion of FSH.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of this study was to elucidate the mechanism(s) involved in stress-induced subfertility by examining the effect of 4 h transport on surge and pulsatile LH secretion in intact ewes and ovariectomized ewes treated with steroids to induce an artificial follicular phase (model ewes). Transport caused a greater delay in the onset of the LH surge in nine intact ewes than it did in ten ovariectomized ewes (intact: 41.0 +/- 0.9 h versus 48.3 +/- 0.8 h, P < 0.02; ovariectomized model: 40.8 +/- 0.6 h versus 42.6 +/- 0.5 h, P < 0.02). Disruption of the hypothalamus-pituitary endocrine balance in intact ewes may have reduced gonadotrophin stimulation of follicular oestradiol production which had an additional effect on the LH surge mechanism. In the ovariectomized model ewes, this effect was masked by the exogenous supply of oestradiol. However, in these model ewes, there was a greater suppression of maximum LH surge concentrations (intact controls: 29 +/- 4 ng ml-1 versus intact transported 22 +/- 5 ng ml-1, P < 0.02; ovariectomized model controls: 35 +/- 7 ng ml-1 versus model transported 15 +/- 2 ng ml-1, P < 0.02). Subsequent exposure to progesterone for 12 days resulted in the resumption of a normal LH profile in the next follicular phase, indicating that acute stress leads to a temporary endocrine lesion. In four intact ewes transported in the mid-follicular phase, there was a suppression of LH pulse amplitude (0.9 +/- 0.3 versus 0.3 +/- 0.02 ng ml-1, P < 0.05) but a statistically significant effect on pulse frequency was not observed (2.0 +/- 0.4 versus 1.7 +/- 0.6 pulses per 2 h). In conclusion, activation of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis by transport in the follicular phase of intact ewes interrupts surge secretion of LH, possibly by interference with LH pulsatility and, hence, follicular oestradiol production. This disruption of gonadotrophin secretion will have a major impact on fertility.  相似文献   

15.
A working hypothesis is proposed to account for the timing of puberty in female sheep. In the immature female, the frequency of LH pulses is low, and ovarian follicles do not develop to an advanced stage. During the pubertal transition, the frequency of LH pulses increases to drive follicular development and the production of oestradiol which evokes the gonadotrophin surge and ovulation. Central to the hypothesis is the hypothalamic pulse generator for GnRH that directs the pattern and level of LH secretion. Growth-related cues are monitored to regulate the activity of the GnRH pulse generator. When a sufficient body size is attained, the frequency of LH pulses increases both because the sensitivity to oestradiol inhibitory feedback decreases and because the GnRH pulse generator can be accelerated by the steroid. This increase in LH pulse frequency occurs provided the female has experienced the requisite exposure to photoperiod, i.e. the long days of summer followed by the short days of autumn. These photoperiodic cues are transduced by the pineal gland into a humoral signal which is an increased nocturnal production of melatonin. Failure to grow to the appropriate body size or to experience the appropriate exposure to photoperiod leads to a maintenance of the prepubertal anovulatory condition because the GnRH pulse generator operates at low frequency.  相似文献   

16.
This study was conducted to determine if photoperiod can influence the pattern of luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion in the absence of the ovaries in the developing female sheep. Lambs were raised in a photoperiod sequence (short, long, short days) known to induce puberty between 30 and 35 wk of age, or in a photoperiod (only short days) that prevents puberty during the first year. Their ovaries were removed at 10 wk of age, and the detailed pattern of LH was assessed (samples at 12-min intervals for 4 h) each 3- to 5-wk period between 9 and 45 wk of age. Rapid LH pulses (40- to 50-min interpulse interval) were evident within a few weeks after ovariectomy in both groups of females. Those exposed to the artificial photoperiod sequence that induces normal sexual maturity did not increase their pulse frequency further during the pubertal period. Moreover, their LH pulse frequencies were not greater than those in agonadal females exposed to the photoperiod that delays puberty. These findings indicate that photoperiodic induction of puberty in the sheep does not require steroid-independent modulation of pulsatile LH secretion.  相似文献   

17.
Juvenile rat ovaries were placed in perifusion culture and exposed to (1) tonic FSH (200 ng PR-1 equiv./ml), (2) LH pulses (2/h, amplitude = 80 ng RP-1 equiv./ml), (3) tonic FSH and LH pulses, (4) tonic FSH with LH mini-surges, or (5) tonic FSH with LH and prolactin mini-surges. The LH mini-surge consisted of a series of 80 ng/ml pulses (2/h) with LH increasing to 180 ng/ml for 2 h then returning to the 80 ng/ml pulses. The prolactin mini-surge consisted of a series of 15 ng/ml pulses (2/h) with prolactin increasing to 40 ng/ml for 2 h before returning to the 15 ng/ml pulses. The LH mini-surge occurred at 14:00 h daily while a prolactin mini-surge occurred at 14:00 h and 06:00 h daily. Ovaries were perifused for 0 (in-vivo control), 24 or 48 h, incubated for 1 h in hormone-free medium to assess steroid secretion and subsequently prepared for histological analysis. After a 24 h exposure to FSH, oestradiol secretion was increased, while exposure to LH pulses enhanced progesterone secretion. Treatment with FSH, LH pulses or FSH plus LH pulses decreased the number of small antral follicles by 24 h of perifusion compared to control (P less than 0.05). The LH mini-surge maintained the small and medium-sized antral follicles after 24 h and increased the number of preovulatory-sized follicles over controls by 48 h (P less than 0.05). Prolactin/LH mini-surges increased the number of preovulatory-sized follicles within 24 h.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The timing and dosage of oestradiol benzoate injected after weaning was critical with respect to the pattern of behavioural oestrus and the ovarian stimulation achieved; treatment on the day of weaning (Day 0) and Day 1 with 60 micrograms oestradiol benzoate/kg body wt produced poor ovulatory responses and abnormal oestrous behaviour. Treatment on Day 2 with 30 micrograms oestradiol benzoate/kg resulted in consistent oestrus and ovulatory responses although the ovulation rates (10 . 6 +/- 1 . 1 in 3-week and 12 . 2 +/- 1 . 7 in 5-week weaned sows) were below those expected in fertile untreated sows weaned at these times. The timing of the preovulatory LH surge (53 . 6 +/- 2 h after oestradiol benzoate) was closely synchronized in all sows and a similar synchronous rise in plasma progesterone concentrations 100 +/- 4 h after oestradiol benzoate suggests a similar synchrony of ovulation. The magnitude of the LH and FSH responses to oestradiol benzoate were similar to those that occur in untreated sows and similar differences also existed in gonadotrophin secretion related to the length of lactation.  相似文献   

20.
The immediate and delayed effects of prepubertal exposure to di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) or oestradiol benzoate on the plasma concentrations of testosterone, oestradiol and LH, as well as testicular morphology were examined in prepubertal boars. In a split litter design experiment, prepubertal boars were intramuscularly exposed to DEHP, oestradiol or vehicle during five weeks, starting at six weeks of age. The dose of DEHP was 50mg/kg of bodyweight twice weekly, which is in the same range as recently used oral doses in rodents. Oestradiol-benzoate was administered at 0.25mg/kg of bodyweight twice weekly. One set of animals was examined immediately after the exposure, and the other set was examined at an age of 7.5 months. During the exposure period concentrations of LH in plasma were lower (p=0.02) in the oestradiol-treated animals than in the control group. In the group exposed to oestradiol, the relative to the body weight of the testicles tended to be lower (p=0.07) than control immediately after five weeks of exposure, and the relative to the body weight of the seminal vesicles tended to be lower (p=0.05) than control at 7.5 months of age. In the DEHP-exposed group an elevated (p=0.005) concentration of testosterone and increased (p=0.04) area of the Leydig cells in the testicles compared to the control group were seen at 7.5 months of age. These data suggest that DEHP early in life causes delayed effects on the reproductive system in the adult.  相似文献   

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