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1.
An in vitro superfusion system was used to examine the effects of cycloheximide on the responsiveness of hemipituitaries from male Rana pipiens chronically treated with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). Control hemipituitaries superfused with medium (DME) alone showed a rapid initial response to 100 ng/ml GnRH, and LH (luteinizing hormone) and FSH (follicle-stimulating hormone) levels remained above baseline throughout up to 13 h of treatment with GnRH. Subsequent to a 2-h rinse with DME alone following the initial treatment with GnRH, these control tissues showed a highly augmented increase in gonadotropin secretion in response to a final hour of GnRH superfusion, suggesting self-priming with as little as 5 h of initial GnRH treatment. Hemipituitaries treated with 71 microM cycloheximide showed a similar rapid initial response to 100 ng/ml GnRH, but levels declined to less than in control tissues within 3 h. Moreover, these tissues exhibited only slight responses when challenged with GnRH a second time. There were also no significant differences in response to GnRH by glands pretreated with cycloheximide for either 3 or 9 h. These results indicate the presence of a rapidly releasable pool of gonadotropin responsible for the initial response to GnRH that has minimal requirements for protein synthesis, and a second pool dependent upon protein synthesis that is involved in the maintenance of elevated gonadotropin secretion in response to chronically superfused GnRH, and for self-priming.  相似文献   

2.
The timed secretion of the luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) from pituitary gonadotrophs during the estrous cycle is crucial for normal reproductive functioning. The release of LH and FSH is stimulated by gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) secreted by hypothalamic GnRH neurons. It is controlled by the frequency of the GnRH signal that varies during the estrous cycle. Curiously, the secretion of LH and FSH is differentially regulated by the frequency of GnRH pulses. LH secretion increases as the frequency increases within a physiological range, and FSH secretion shows a biphasic response, with a peak at a lower frequency. There is considerable experimental evidence that one key factor in these differential responses is the autocrine/paracrine actions of the pituitary polypeptides activin and follistatin. Based on these data, we develop a mathematical model that incorporates the dynamics of these polypeptides. We show that a model that incorporates the actions of activin and follistatin is sufficient to generate the differential responses of LH and FSH secretion to changes in the frequency of GnRH pulses. In addition, it shows that the actions of these polypeptides, along with the ovarian polypeptide inhibin and the estrogen-mediated variations in the frequency of GnRH pulses, are sufficient to account for the time courses of LH and FSH plasma levels during the rat estrous cycle. That is, a single peak of LH on the afternoon of proestrus and a double peak of FSH on proestrus and early estrus. We also use the model to identify which regulation pathways are indispensable for the differential regulation of LH and FSH and their time courses during the estrous cycle. We conclude that the actions of activin, inhibin, and follistatin are consistent with LH/FSH secretion patterns, and likely complement other factors in the production of the characteristic secretion patterns in female rats.  相似文献   

3.
Mammalian gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) I is the neuropeptide that regulates reproduction. In recent years, a second isoform of GnRH, GnRH II, and its highly selective type II GnRH receptor were cloned and identified in monkey brain, but its physiological function remains unknown. We sought to determine whether GnRH II stimulates LH and FSH secretion by activating specific receptors in primary pituitary cultures from male monkeys. Dispersed pituitary cells were maintained in steroid-depleted media and stimulated with GnRH I and/or GnRH II for 6 h. Cells were also treated with Antide (Bachem, King of Prussia, PA), a GnRH I antagonist, to block gonadotropin secretion. In monkey as well as rat pituitary cultures, GnRH II was a less effective stimulator of LH and FSH secretion than was GnRH I. In both cell preparations, Antide completely blocked LH and FSH release provoked by GnRH II as well as GnRH I. Furthermore, the combination of GnRH I and GnRH II was no more effective than either agonist alone. These results indicate that GnRH II stimulates FSH and LH secretion, but they also imply that this action occurs through the GnRH I receptor. The GnRH II receptors may have a unique function in the monkey brain and pituitary other than regulation of gonadotropin secretion.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of changes in pulse frequency of exogenously infused gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) were investigated in 6 adult surgically hypothalamo/pituitary-disconnected (HPD) gonadal-intact rams. Ten-minute sampling in 16 normal animals prior to HPD showed endogenous luteinizing hormone (LH) pulses occurring every 2.3 h with a mean pulse amplitude of 1.11 +/- 0.06 (SEM) ng/ml. Mean testosterone and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentrations were 3.0 +/- 0.14 ng/ml and 0.85 +/- 0.10 ng/ml, respectively. Before HPD, increasing single doses of GnRH (50-500 ng) elicited a dose-dependent rise of LH, 50 ng producing a response of similar amplitude to those of spontaneous LH pulses. The effects of varying the pulse frequency of a 100-ng GnRH dose weekly was investigated in 6 HPD animals; the pulse intervals explored were those at 1, 2, and 4 h. The pulsatile GnRH treatment was commenced 2-6 days after HPD when plasma testosterone concentrations were in the castrate range (less than 0.5 ng/ml) in all animals. Pulsatile LH and testosterone secretion was reestablished in all animals in the first 7 days by 2-h GnRH pulses, but the maximal pulse amplitudes of both hormones were only 50 and 62%, respectively, of endogenous pulses in the pre-HPD state. The plasma FSH pattern was nonpulsatile and FSH concentrations gradually increased in the first 7 days, although not to the pre-HPD range. Increasing GnRH pulse frequency from 2- to 1-hour immediately increased the LH baseline and pulse amplitude. As testosterone concentrations increased, the LH responses declined in a reciprocal fashion between Days 2 and 7. FSH concentration decreased gradually over the 7 days at the 1-h pulse frequency. Slowing the GnRH pulse to a 4-h frequency produced a progressive fall in testosterone concentrations, even though LH baselines were unchanged and LH pulse amplitudes increased transiently. FSH concentrations were unaltered during the 4-h regime. These results show that 1) the pulsatile pattern of LH and testosterone secretion in HPD rams can be reestablished by exogenous GnRH, 2) the magnitude of LH, FSH, and testosterone secretion were not fully restored to pre-HPD levels by the GnRH dose of 100 ng per pulse, and 3) changes in GnRH pulse frequency alone can influence both gonadotropin and testosterone secretion in the HPD model.  相似文献   

5.
It is generally accepted that inhibin secretion in the testis is regulated by FSH; however, the kinetics of inhibin secretion have not been well defined in vivo and in vitro. We investigated the kinetics of inhibin secretion in response to FSH stimulation in static and superfused Sertoli cell cultures. Sertoli cells from 18-day-old rats were cultured in chemically defined medium for 3 days and were then stimulated for different time periods with FSH (0.1 microgram/ml). In static cultures, media were changed every 2, 4, or 8 h, and the superfusion was carried out at a steady rate of 3 ml/h. Inhibin in the culture media was measured by RIA, using antiserum against synthetic replicate [30Tyr]inhibin alpha-chain-(1-30) and, in some experiments, also by bioassay. The dynamics of inhibin secretion were similar in static and superfused Sertoli cell cultures. A significant increase (p less than 0.01) of inhibin secretion was noted after 5-6 h of FSH exposure. After 8-12 h of continuous FSH presence, the secretion of inhibin reached a maximal level, 5-10-fold higher than basal secretion (no FSH). In the continuous presence of FSH, inhibin secretion remained stable at the high level for up to 54 h. FSH removal caused a delayed (8-h) decrease (p less than 0.01) of inhibin secretion, with return to control basal values after approximately 30 h. When FSH was removed 4 h after its addition, inhibin secretion again increased 5-10-fold between 4 and 12 h, then returned to basal values within 30 h.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
In a series of four experiments, the temporal development of acute inhibitory and delayed stimulatory effects of 17 beta-estradiol (E) on luteinizing hormone (LH) release by superfused rat anterior pituitary cells pulsed with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) was studied. Dispersed anterior pituitary cells from ovariectomized rats were cultured on Bio-Beads for 3 days and then placed in columns and superfused for up to 24 hr. During superfusion, the cells were exposed to GnRH pulses (3 X 10(-9) M, one 6-min pulse/hr). Cells treated with E (3 X 10(-10) M) either before (only 24 hr prior to superfusion) or before and during superfusion released significantly (P less than 0.05) more LH in response to the first few pulses of GnRH than cells treated with diluent. In contrast, cells treated with E only during superfusion initially released less GnRH-induced LH than cells treated with diluent. In a subsequent experiment, the inhibitory effect of E reached a maximum by 1.5 hr (P less than 0.01), and then gradually disappeared after 4.5 hr. Cells superfused simultaneously with E and fixed "low"-dose GnRH (5 X 10(-10) M) pulses did not exhibit enhanced LH responses with time to that dose of GnRH. However, E-superfused cells responded more than diluent-superfused cells to subsequent stimulation with a higher-dose GnRH pulse. Superfusion of cells with E for 16.5 hr in the absence of GnRH pulses also did not increase release of LH to low-dose (5 X 10(-10) M) pulses of GnRH, yet did cause a transitory increase to subsequent high-dose (10(-8) M) GnRH pulses. In conclusion, these results demonstrate the direct biphasic inhibitory then stimulatory effects of E on GnRH-induced LH release by superfused rat anterior pituitary cells. Expression of the stimulatory effect of E is related to the dose of GnRH.  相似文献   

7.
Experiments were conducted to determine the effects of acute hyperprolactinemia (hyperPRL) on the control of luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone secretion in male rats. Exposure to elevated levels of prolactin from the time of castration (1 mg ovine prolactin 2 X daily) greatly attenuated the post-castration rise in LH observed 3 days after castration. By 7 days after castration, LH concentrations in the prolactin-treated animals approached the levels observed in control animals. HyperPRL had no effect on the postcastration rise in FSH. Pituitary responsiveness to gonadotropin hormone-releasing hormone (GnRH), as assessed by LH responses to an i.v. bolus of 25 ng GnRH, was only minimally effected by hperPRL at 3 and 7 days postcastration. LH responses were similar at all time points after GnRH in control and prolactin-treated animals, except for the peak LH responses, which were significantly smaller in the prolactin-treated animals. The effects of hyperPRL were examined further by exposing hemipituitaries in vitro from male rats to 6-min pulses of GnRH (5 ng/ml) every 30 min for 4 h. HyperPRL had no effect on basal LH release in vitro, on GnRH-stimulated LH release, or on pituitary LH concentrations in hemipituitaries from animals that were intact, 3 days postcastration, or 7 days postcastration. However, net GnRH-stimulated release of FSH was significantly higher by pituitaries from hyperprolactinemic, castrated males. To assess indirectly the effects of hyperPRL on GnRH release, males were subjected to electrical stimulation of the arcuate nucleus/median eminence (ARC/ME) 3 days postcastration. The presence of elevated levels of prolactin not only suppressed basal LH secretion but reduced the LH responses to electrical stimulation by 50% when compared to the LH responses in control castrated males. These results suggest that acute hyperPRL suppresses LH secretion but not FSH secretion. Although pituitary responsiveness is somewhat attenuated in hyperprolactinemic males, as assessed in vivo, it is normal when pituitaries are exposed to adequate amounts of GnRH in vitro. Thus, the effects of hyperPRL on pituitary responsiveness appear to be minimal, especially if the pituitary is exposed to an adequate GnRH stimulus. The suppression of basal LH secretion in vivo most likely reflects inadequate endogenous GnRH secretion. The greatly reduced LH responses after electrical stimulation in hyperprolactinemic males exposed to prolactin suggest further that hyperPRL suppresses GnRH secretion.  相似文献   

8.
The current dogma is that the differential regulation of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) synthesis and secretion is modulated by gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse frequency and by changes in inhibins, activins, and follistatins both at the pituitary and at the peripheral level. To date no studies have looked at the overlapping function of these regulators in a combined setting. We tested the hypothesis that changes in GnRH pulse frequency alter the relative abundance of these regulators at the pituitary and peripheral levels in a manner consistent with changes in pituitary and circulating concentrations of FSH; that is, an increase in FSH will be accompanied by increased stimulatory input (activin) and/or reduced follistatin and inhibin. Ovariectomized ewes were subjected to a combination hypothalamic pituitary disconnection (HPD)-hypophyseal portal blood collection procedure. Hypophyseal portal and jugular blood samples were collected for a 6-h period from non-HPD ewes, HPD ewes, or HPD ewes administered GnRH hourly or every 3 h for 4 days. In the absence of endogenous hypothalamic and ovarian hormones that regulate gonadotropin secretion, 3-hourly pulses of GnRH increased pituitary content of FSH more than hourly GnRH, although these differences were not evident in the peripheral circulation. The results failed to support the hypothesis in that the preferential increase of pituitary content of FSH by the lower GnRH pulse frequency could be explained by changes in the pituitary content of inhibin A, follistatin, or activin B. Perhaps the effects of GnRH pulse frequency on FSH is due to changes in the balance of free versus bound amounts of these FSH regulatory proteins or to the involvement of other regulators not monitored in this study.  相似文献   

9.
The hormonal interactions required for the generation of a secondary surge of FSH on the evening of proestrus have not been clearly defined. The role of GnRH in driving a surge of FSH has been questioned by findings in previous studies. In the current study, gonadotropin secretion was measured from pituitary fragments obtained from rats at 0900 and 2400 h on each day of the estrous cycle. Pituitary fragments were perifused in basal (unstimulated) conditions or in the presence of GnRH pulses to determine whether a selective increase in basal release of FSH and/or an increase in the responsiveness to GnRH occurs during the secondary FSH surge. Each anterior pituitary was cut into eighths and placed into a microchamber for perifusion. Seven pulses of GnRH (peak amplitude = 50 ng/ml; duration = approximately 2 min) were administered at a rate of one per hour starting at 30 min. Fractions of perfusate were collected every 5 min and frozen until RIA for LH and FSH. The mean total amount of LH or FSH secreted during the hour interval following each of the last six pulses of GnRH (or the corresponding basal hour) was calculated. Analysis of variance with repeated measures indicated that the evening secretion of LH on proestrus (2400 h) dropped significantly (p less than 0.05) from a maximum on the morning of proestrus (0900 h), whereas the FSH secretion remained elevated at this time. Therefore, the ratio of FSH to LH secreted in response to GnRH pulses was highest during the secondary FSH surge and lowest on the morning of proestrus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The differential control of gonadotropin secretion by GnRH pulse frequency may reflect changes in the storage of LH and FSH. To test this hypothesis, ovariectomized ewes passively immunized against GnRH received pulsatile injections of saline (group 1) or GnRH analogue: 1 pulse/6 h for group 2 or 1 pulse/h for group 3, during 48 h. Immunization against GnRH suppressed pulsatility of LH release and reduced mean FSH plasma levels (3.1 +/- 0.2 vs. 2.2 +/- 0.1 ng/ml before and 3 days after immunization, respectively). Pulsatile GnRH analogue replacement restored LH pulses but not FSH plasma levels. Low and high frequencies of GnRH analogue increased the percentage of LH-containing cells in a similar way (group 1 = 6.9 +/- 0.5% vs. group 2 = 10.5 +/- 0.8%, or vs. group 3 = 9.6 +/- 0.4%). In contrast, the rise of the percentage of FSH-containing cells was greater after administration of the analogue at low frequency than at high frequency (group 1 = 3.7 +/- 0.4% vs. group 2 = 8.4 +/- 0.2%, or vs. group 3 = 5.2 +/- 0.8%). Moreover, while GnRH pulse frequency had no differential effect on FSHbeta mRNA levels, LHbeta mRNA levels were higher under high than low frequency. These data showed that the frequency of GnRH pulses can modulate the gonadotropin storage pattern in the ewe. These changes may be a component of the differential regulation of LH and FSH secretion.  相似文献   

11.
This experiment determined if the degree of stimulation of the pituitary gland by GnRH affects the suppressive actions of inhibin and testosterone on gonadotropin secretion in rams. Two groups (n = 5) of castrated adult rams underwent hypothalamopituitary disconnection and were given two i.v. injections of vehicle or 0.64 microg/kg of recombinant human inhibin A (rh-inhibin) 6 h apart when treated with i.m. injections of oil and testosterone propionate every 12 h for at least 7 days. Each treatment was administered when the rams were infused i.v. with 125 ng of GnRH every 4 h (i.e., slow-pulse frequency) and 125 ng of GnRH every hour (i.e., fast-pulse frequency). The FSH concentrations and LH pulse amplitude were lower and the LH concentrations higher during the fast GnRH pulse frequency. The GnRH pulse frequency did not influence the ability of rh-inhibin and testosterone to suppress FSH secretion. Testosterone did not affect LH secretion. Following rh-inhibin treatment, LH pulse amplitude decreased at the slow, but not at the fast, GnRH pulse frequency, and LH concentrations decreased at both GnRH pulse frequencies. We conclude that the degree of stimulation of the pituitary by GnRH does not influence the ability of inhibin or testosterone to suppress FSH secretion in rams. Inhibin may be capable of suppressing LH secretion under conditions of low GnRH.  相似文献   

12.
The role of diacylglycerol (DG) as a source of arachidonic acid during gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) stimulation of gonadotropin secretion was analyzed in primary cultures of rat anterior pituitary cells. An inhibitor of DG lipase (RHC 80267, RHC) caused dose-dependent blockade of GnRH-stimulated luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion. The DG lipase inhibitor did not alter gonadotropin responses to arachidonic acid, and addition of arachidonic acid reversed its inhibition of GnRH-stimulated LH and FSH release. In [3H]arachidonic acid-prelabeled cells, incubation with RHC increased the accumulation of [3H]DG. These results suggest that DG lipase participates in GnRH action and that arachidonic acid mobilization from DG is involved in the mechanism of gonadotropin release. Gonadotropin responses to tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate and dioctanoyl glycerol were not altered by RHC, and the addition of these activators of protein kinase C (Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent enzyme) did not prevent the inhibition of GnRH-induced gonadotropin release by RHC. Activation of phospholipase A2 by melittin increased LH and FSH secretion, whereas blockade of this enzyme by quinacrine reduced GnRH-stimulated hormone release. However, RHC did not diminish the gonadotropin response to melittin. The inhibitory actions of RHC and quinacrine were additive and were reversed by concomitant treatment with arachidonic acid. Ionomycin also increased LH and FSH release, and the gonadotropin responses to the ionophore were unaltered by RHC but were reduced by quinacrine. Incubation of cells in Ca2+-depleted (+/- [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid) medium reduced but did not abolish the LH and FSH releasing activity of GnRH. Treatment with RHC also reduced the gonadotropin responses to GnRH under Ca2+-depleted conditions. These observations indicate that RHC inhibition of GnRH action is not due to nonspecific actions on Ca2+ entry, protein kinase C activation and actions, nor phospholipase A2 enzyme activity. The results of this study provide further evidence for an extracellular Ca2+-independent mechanism of GnRH action, and suggest that GnRH causes mobilization of arachidonic acid by two distinct lipases, namely, phospholipase A2 and DG lipase, during stimulation of gonadotropin secretion.  相似文献   

13.
Partially purified inhibin from primate Sertoli cell culture medium (pSCl) suppresses both LH and FSH secretion from cultured rat pituitary cells stimulated with GnRH. To examine the mechanism of action of pSCl, we have measured steady state levels of mRNAs for the gonadotropin subunits in pituitary cell cultures exposed to 10 nM GnRH for 6 h in control or pSCl-containing medium (short term) and after 72-h pretreatment with pSCl or control medium (long term). Messenger RNA levels were determined by Northern analysis using specific cDNA probes for rat FSH beta, LH beta, and the common alpha-subunit. In the long term experiments, pSCl inhibited GnRH-stimulated release of FSH (47.4 +/- 3.3% of control), LH (69.2 +/- 2.3%), and free glycoprotein alpha-subunit (74.2 +/- 4.5%), and intracellular FSH declined to 88.4 +/- 3.5% of control. Concentrations of the subunit mRNAs were all decreased: FSH beta to 54.4 +/- 5.0%, LH beta to 79.6 +/- 9.4%, and alpha to 70.8 +/- 8.7% of control. In the short-term experiments, pSCl also suppressed FSH, LH, and alpha-subunit secretion to 75.9 +/- 3.6%, 79.5 +/- 2.1%, and 90.9 +/- 1.8% of control, respectively. Intracellular LH and alpha-subunit levels were significantly increased in cells treated for 6 h with GnRH and pSCl (155 +/- 18%, 145 +/- 14% of control), while FSH was comparable to control. After 6 h, pSCl selectively reduced the level of mRNA for FSH beta (56.5 +/- 5.8% of control).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The following study was conducted to examine the effects of estrogen and polypeptides, given either alone or in combination, on pulsatile gonadotropin secretion. One week after ovariectomy, rats received s.c. injections of oil or various doses (0.5, 5, 20 micrograms) of estradiol benzoate (EB) followed 1 day later by i.v. administration of 60 micrograms purified porcine follistatin, 10 micrograms recombinant inhibin, or the appropriate vehicle. Four hours after injection of the nonsteroids, blood was collected at 10-min intervals for 2 h, and the effects on pulsatile hormone release were assessed. Administration of EB alone dose-dependently suppressed mean and trough (lowest point between two pulses) FSH levels and all parameters of pulsatile LH release. Both follistatin and inhibin at the doses employed suppressed mean FSH levels to an equivalent extent (40%). Follistatin, but not inhibin, suppressed FSH pulse amplitude, while neither polypeptide alone influenced FSH pulse frequency or any parameter of pulsatile LH release. The effects of follistatin and EB on mean FSH levels were additive at all EB doses, whereas the effects of inhibin and EB were additive only at the middle EB dose. Follistatin in combination with the lowest EB dose significantly suppressed mean LH levels. These studies are the first to demonstrate that combined treatment with estrogen and the nonsteroids follistatin and inhibin is more efficacious in suppressing FSH release than treatment with either agent alone, thereby indicating that both steroids and nonsteroids are probably important in the physiological regulation of FSH secretion in rats. The additive effects of these compounds on FSH secretion could form the basis for exploring novel contraceptive interventions.  相似文献   

15.
Episodic GnRH input is necessary for the maintenance of LH and FSH secretion. In the current study we have assessed the requirement of a pulsatile GnRH signal for the regulation of gonadotropin alpha- and beta-subunit gene expression. Using a dispersed rat pituitary perifusion system, GnRH (10 nM) was administered as a continuous infusion vs. hourly pulses. Secretion of free alpha-subunit, LH, and FSH were monitored over 5-min intervals for the entire 12-h treatment period before the responses of alpha, LH beta, and FSH beta mRNAs were assessed. Basal release of all three glycoproteins declined slowly over 6-8 h before reaching a plateau. The cells were responsive to each pulse of GnRH, but continuous GnRH elicited only a brief episode of free alpha-subunit, LH, and FSH release, followed by a return to unstimulated levels. Despite the similar patterns of secretion, differences were observed in the responses of gonadotropin mRNAs to the two modes of GnRH. alpha mRNA increased in response to continuous (1.6-fold) or pulsatile (1.7-fold) GnRH. FSH beta mRNA was suppressed to 48% of the control value after continuous GnRH, but was stimulated over 4-fold by the pulses. LH beta mRNA was unresponsive to either treatment paradigm. We conclude that in vitro 1) alpha mRNA levels are increased in response to GnRH independent of the mode of stimulation; 2) under the conditions studied, LH beta mRNA levels are unresponsive to either mode of GnRH input; and 3) the response of FSH beta mRNA to GnRH is highly dependent on the mode of administration, with levels depressed in response to continuous GnRH, but stimulated by pulsatile GnRH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Luteinizing hormone and follicle stimulating hormone secretion was stimulated by 4 min pulses of arachidonic acid (3 X 10(-5) to 10(-4)M) in superfused rat pituitary cells. The effect of its lipoxygenase metabolites, 5-hydroxy-6,8,11,14-eicosatetranoic acid (5-HETE) and 15-hydroxy-5,8,10,14-eicosatetranoic acid (15-HETE) was more potent on hormone release when added in the same dose. Using 3 X 10(-5)M 5-HETE, its releasing activity on gonadotropins was comparable to that of GnRH (10(-9)M). 15-HETE (3 X 10(-5)M) was even more potent on LH and FSH secretion than 5-HETE. The secretory profile induced by 5-HETE and 15-HETE was also similar to that shown for GnRH, resulting in a rapid increase and a more prolonged decline of the hormone release. The addition of these fatty acids to superfused pituitary cells did not alter the response of the cells to their physiological ligand. These findings give further support to the proposal that metabolites of arachidonic acid may be involved in receptor-mediated mechanisms of gonadotropin release in pituitary cells.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
In an in vitro bioassay using rat pituitary cell cultures the effect of contraceptive progestins was tested on basal and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-induced luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion in vitro. Progestins diminished gonadotropin release in pituitary cells stimulated with GnRH, but did not alter basal values. This inhibitory effect was dose dependent in a range of 10(-10)-10(-5) M tested and the inhibitory action of most of the progestins examined was more potent than that of progesterone. The maximal reduction of LH and FSH values was by 60% of GnRH-induced control levels. Progestins also caused a shift in sensitivity of cells to GnRh (10(-12)-10(-6) M). When time dependence was investigated, some progestins potentiated GnRH effect on gonadotropins in pituitary cell cultures pre-incubated for a short time (4 h) with steroids. More prolonged pre-incubations from 23 to 71 h resulted in a progressive suppression of LH and FSH response to GnRH (10(-7) M). In order to examine intracellular effects, cells were pretreated with progestins and inositol phosphate metabolism was investigated. The data obtained in pituitary cells give evidence that polyphosphoinositide breakdown is potentially an early step in the action of GnRH on gonadotropin secretion by providing diacylglycerol and inositol phosphates. Addition of gonadotropin-releasing hormone to myo-2[3H]inositol-prelabeled rat pituitary cells in primary culture evoked a dose-dependent increase of the accumulation of [3H]inositol phosphates with a rise of inositol triphosphate, inositol diphosphate and inositol monophosphate within 1 min. Using one contraceptive progestin, gestoden, inositol phosphate production was inhibited by 80% compared to controls of GnRH-treated cells without the addition of steroids. The data obtained in this study suggest that this in vitro bioassay using rat pituitary cells is a useful tool in testing progestational compounds regarding their potency on gonadotropin release. In addition, these results show that one possible site of interference of progestins with GnRH-induced gonadotropin secretion may involve polyphosphoinositide breakdown.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of exogenous gonadal steroids, testosterone (T), and 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) upon the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis were reported to be different between prepubertal and adult Siberian hamsters. Utilizing an in vitro static culture system, we investigated if age-related differences in steroid responsiveness occurs at the pituitary. Prepubertal (20 days old) or adult (140 days old) male Siberian hamsters were implanted with 1 mm silastic capsules containing undiluted T, E(2) or cholesterol (Ch, control). After 15 days, pituitaries were removed, incubated in vitro, and subjected to the following treatments: two baseline measurements, one challenge with 10ng/ml of D-Lys(6)-gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), and three post-challenge washes. Fractions were collected every 30 minutes and measured for follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH). T and E(2 )reduced basal secretion of LH and FSH in juveniles but not adults. In juveniles, E(2) increased GnRH-induced FSH and LH secretion, while T augmented GnRH-induced FSH secretion but attenuated GnRH-induced LH secretion. Steroid treatment had no effect on GnRH-stimulated LH or FSH release in adults. The only effect of steroid hormones upon adult pituitaries was the more rapid return of gonadotropin secretion to baseline levels following a GnRH challenge. These data suggest both basal and GnRH-induced gonadotropin secretion are more sensitive to steroid treatment in juvenile hamsters than adults. Further, differential steroidal regulation of FSH and LH at the level of the pituitary in juveniles might be a mechanism for the change in sensitivity to the negative effects of steroid hormones that occurs during the pubertal transition.  相似文献   

20.
We have shown that 4 ng luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) pulses induced significantly greater luteinizing hormone (LH) release from proestrous rat superfused anterior pituitary cells with no cycle related differences in follicle stimulating hormone (FSH). Current studies gave 8 ng LHRH in various pulse regimens to study amplitude, duration and frequency effects on LH and FSH secretion from estrous 0800, proestrous 1500 and proestrous 1900 cells. Regimen 1 gave 8 ng LHRH as a single bolus once/h; regimen 2 divided the 8 ng into 3 equal 'minipulses' given at 4 min intervals to extend duration; regimen 3 gave the 3 'minipulses' at 10 min intervals, thereby further extending duration: regimen 4 was the same as regimen 2, except that the 3 'minipulses' were given at a pulse frequency of 2 h rather than 1 h. In experiment 1, all four regimens were employed at proestrus 1900. FSH was significantly elevated by all 8 ng regimens as compared to 4 ng pulses; further, 8 ng divided into 3 equal 'minipulses' separated by 4 min at 1 and 3 h frequencies (regimens 2 and 4) resulted in FSH secretion that was significantly greater than with either a single 8 ng bolus (regimen 1) or when the 'minipulses' were separated by 10 min (regimen 3). In experiment 2, at proestrus 1500, FSH response to the second pulse of regimen 4 was significantly greater than in regimen 2; LH release was significantly suppressed at pulse 2 compared to regimen 2 accentuating divergent FSH secretion. At estrus 0800, FSH response to the second pulse of regimen 4 was significantly stimulated FSH at proestrus 1900, 1500 and estrus 0800, FSH divergence was most marked at proestrus 1500. These data indicate a potential role for hypothalamic LHRH secretory pattern in inducing divergent gonadotropin secretion in the rat.  相似文献   

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