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1.
J A King  R P Millar 《Peptides》1985,6(4):689-694
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) immunoreactive peptides in extracts of hake (Merluccius capensis) and tilapia (Tilapia sparrmanii) brain were investigated by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and radioimmunoassay with region-specific antisera. In hake brain, content and concentration of GnRH was higher in the pituitary gland than in the hypothalamic lobes or extrahypothalamic brain. Hake pituitary gland GnRH was purified by six consecutive HPLC systems. The major GnRH molecular form co-eluted with salmon brain GnRH (Trp7, Leu8-GnRH) in four different HPLC systems which were specifically designed to separate the four natural vertebrate GnRHs (mammalian, salmon, chicken I and II). The immunoreactive peak in the final purification step had a retention time identical to that of Trp7, Leu8-GnRH and an UV absorbance (280 nm) peak appropriate for two tryptophan residues in the peptide, as in Trp7, Leu8-GnRH. Six additional less hydrophobic forms of GnRH were detected. Tilapia brain extract contained two major GnRH molecular forms which had identical retention times to chicken GnRH I (Gln8-GnRH) and Trp7, Leu8-GnRH in an HPLC system which separates the natural vertebrate GnRHs. The immunological properties of these two immunoreactive peaks, determined by relative interaction with four region-specific GnRH antisera raised against vertebrate GnRHs, were identical to those of Gln8-GnRH and Trp7, Leu8-GnRH. Additional GnRH molecular forms were also detected. In summary, these findings indicate that a major GnRH molecule in hake pituitary gland is Trp7, Leu8-GnRH, while tilapia brain contains both Trp7, Leu8-GnRH and Gln8-GnRH. Additional GnRH molecular forms were detected in both species.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
J A King  R P Millar 《Peptides》1986,7(5):827-834
GnRH immunoreactive and bioactive peptides in Xenopus laevis brain extract were investigated by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), radioimmunoassay with region-specific antisera raised against GnRH (mammalian), His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH (chicken II) and Tyr3,Leu5,Glu6,Trp7,Lys8-GnRH (lamprey), and by assessment of biological activity. Two immunoreactive peptides eluted in the same positions as GnRH and His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH respectively in HPLC systems which were specifically designed to separate four known natural vertebrate GnRHs (mammalian, chicken I and II, salmon). The immunological properties of these two immunoreactive peaks, determined by relative interaction with three region-specific antisera raised against mammalian GnRH and two specific His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH antisera, were identical to those of GnRH and His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH. The immunoreactive peak co-eluting with His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH represented approximately one-third of the total brain GnRH. Both immunoreactive peaks stimulated luteinizing hormone (LH) release in a chicken dispersed pituitary cell bioassay, and the amounts of LH release stimulated by the two peaks were appropriate for these peaks being GnRH and His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH. A small hydrophobic peak with GnRH immunoreactivity eluted in the same position as Trp7,Leu8-GnRH (salmon), while Gln8-GnRH (chicken I) and lamprey GnRH were not detected. Two additional rather hydrophilic peptides cross-reacted with a COOH-terminus-directed antiserum and had LH-releasing activity. LH-releasing activity was also detected in hydrophobic HPLC fractions. In summary, these data provide evidence for the presence of both GnRH and a second peptide with properties identical to His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH in X. laevis brain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) molecular forms in the brains of three reptiles, Alligator mississippiensis (alligator), Calcides ocellatus tiligugu (skink) and Podarcis s. sicula (lizard) were characterized by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and radioimmunoassay with region-specific antisera, and by assessment of luteinizing (LH)-releasing activity in chicken dispersed pituitary cells. In alligator brain two GnRHs had identical properties to the two known forms of chicken hypothalamic GnRH (Gln8-GnRH and His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH) in their elution on two reverse phase HPLC systems, cross-reaction with region-specific GnRH antisera, and ability to release LH. In skink brain, one immunoreactive and bioactive GnRH form, which eluted in the same position as His5,Trp7,Tyr8-GnRH on reverse phase HPLC, was identified. Three bioactive and immunoreactive GnRHs were detected in lizard brain. One form had similar properties to salmon brain GnRH (Trp7,Leu8-GnRH). The other two GnRH-like peptides are novel forms. One of these forms eluted in the same position as Gln8-GnRH on HPLC but had different immunological properties, while the third form was a rather hydrophobic species which appeared to be modified in the middle region of the molecule.  相似文献   

4.
In most vertebrate species two forms of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) are present in the brain, and their differential distribution suggests they have different functional roles. The regional distribution and relative concentrations of GnRH molecular forms in the brain of adult clawed toad (Xenopus laevis) were determined using high performance liquid chromatography and radioimmunoassay with a library of region-specific GnRH antisera. Four immunoreactive forms of GnRH were detected: mammalian, hydroxyproline mammalian, chicken II, and an unidetified form of GnRH. Mammalian GnRH was distributed throughout the brain, and hydroxyproline mammalian was present in the forebrain, midbrain (excluding hypothalamus), and hypothalamus. Chicken GnRH II also occurred throughout the brain, but was present in greater amounts in the hindbrain and midbrain (excluding hypothalamus). An unidentified form of GnRH with properties of salmon GnRH was detected in the forebrain. Considering the relative proportions of mammalian GnRH and chicken GnRH II in the major brain areas, the concentration of mammalian GnRH was high in the forebrain, midbrain (excluding hypothalamus), and in particular in the hypothalamus, and very little chicken GnRH II was present in these areas. In the hindbrain, chicken GnRH II predominated and the concentration of chicken GnRH II was highest in the medulla. These findings suggest: (1) mammalian GnRH is the prime regulator of gonadotropin release from the pituitary, and (2) chicken GnRH II has an extrapituitary role.  相似文献   

5.
The purpose of the present work was to develop a chromatographic system for the separation of five molecular forms of the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH); mammalian GnRH (mGnRH) (LHRH), salmon GnRH (sGnRH), chicken I GnRH (clGnRH), chicken II GnRH (cIIGnRH) and lamprey GnRH I (IGnRH-I). By using an ion-exchange HPLC column and isocratic elution, it was possible to separate properly the five peptides in approximately 20 min. The utility of the system in determining the GnRHs forms present in the brain of two species of vertebrates was examined.  相似文献   

6.
Four forms of immunoreactive GnRH have been detected in tissue extracts of both whole brains and terminal nerves from the spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias). The GnRH forms were characterized using reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and immunological recognition with four different antisera. Three of these forms possess immunological and chromatographic properties consistent with known forms of GnRH: mammalian GnRH, chicken GnRH-II and salmon GnRH. An additional form, with an HPLC elution position intermediate between chicken GnRH-II and salmon GnRH appears to be a new structure of GnRH. The presence of all four GnRH forms in the terminal nerve suggests a lack of regional specificity of the expressed forms of GnRH in the brain.  相似文献   

7.
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) peptides in the brain and pituitary of the European eel (Anguilla anguilla) were investigated by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and radioimmunoassay with region-specific antisera. Two GnRH molecular forms were demonstrated in brain and pituitary extracts. One form eluted in the same position as synthetic mammalian GnRH on HPLC and was recognized by antibodies directed against the NH2 and COOH termini of mammalian GnRH as well as by antibodies to the middle region. The second form eluted in the same position as synthetic chicken GnRH II and was recognized by specific antibodies to this molecule. Salmon GnRH and chicken GnRH I were not detected. The occurrence of mammalian GnRH in teleost fish suggests that this molecular form is more ancient than was previously suspected and arose earlier than in primitive tetrapods, or that it has arisen in the eel through random mutation of salmon GnRH. The lack of salmon GnRH in the eel brain indicates that this molecular form is not common to all teleost species. The finding in eel brain of chicken GnRH II, which has previously been described in species of Mammalia, Aves, Reptilia, Amphibia, Osteichthyes, and Chondrichthyes, supports our hypothesis that this widespread structural variant may represent an early evolved and conserved form of GnRH.  相似文献   

8.
Radioimmunoassay (RIA) studies on highperformance liquid chromatography (HPLC) fractions of brain extracts of the three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus, provided evidence for at least two forms of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). One form showed chromatographic and immunological properties similar to that of synthetic salmon GnRH (sGnRH). A second, unidentified form of GnRH eluted in the same position as chicken GnRH I (cGnRH-I); however, it did not cross-react in a cGnRH-I RIA. Furthermore, it cannot be excluded that chicken GnRH II (cGnRH-II) and maybe one other unidentified form are present in the stickleback. The distribution of GnRH in the brain of breeding adult male sticklebacks was studied by use of immunohistochemistry. Two antisera against sGnRH and antisera against mGnRH and cGnRH-II were applied on cryosections and visualized using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. Staining patterns were similar after incubations with all four antisera. Immunoreactive fibers were found in most parts of the brain. Three distinct groups of GnRH-immunoreactive perikarya were found in the nucleus olfactoretinalis, in the nucleus anterior periventricularis, and in the nucleus lateralis tuberis. Moreover, weakly stained cells occurred in a periventricular position in the midbrain. The proximal pars distalis of the pituitary, housing the gonadotropic cells, was richly innervated by GnRH-positive fibers. In the pars intermedia and in the rostral pars distalis, immunoreactive fibers were absent.  相似文献   

9.
Three polyclonal antisera raised in rabbits against the mammalian molecular form of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) were tested in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for crossreactivity with naturally occurring GnRHs and with GnRH analogues. Antisera were then tested immunocytochemically in order (i) to identify amino acids essential for the binding of each antiserum, and (ii) to evaluate the specificity of the immunocytochemical reaction in brain sections from various species of cyclostomes, amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Antiserum GnRH 80/1, recognizing mainly a discontinuous determinant including the NH2- and COOH-termini, crossreacts with GnRHs the molecular bending of which enables the spatial approach of both terminal amino acid residues. Antiserum GnRH 80/2, by requiring the COOH-terminus for binding and not tolerating substitutions by aromatic amino acids in the middle region of the molecule, recognizes chicken I GnRH, however, not the salmon form. The use of this antiserum is appropriate in species synthesizing the mammalian and/or the chicken I form of GnRH. GnRH antiserum 81/1 is specific mostly for mammalian GnRH. The results obtained by ELISAs are confirmed by immunocytochemical studies. A comparison between the results obtained in ELISA and in immunocytochemistry involving mammalian-, chicken I-, chicken II-, salmon-, and lamprey-directed GnRH antisera resulted in the following conclusions: (1) An antiserum recognizing the discontinuous antigen determinant including both NH2- and COOH-termini may be reactive in most vertebrate brain sections thus being appropriate for phylogenetically directed immunocytochemical studies. (2) Moreover, this discontinuous determinant seems to be immunocytochemically reactive in all parts of the neurons in the GnRH system, whereas, in some species, determinants located in the middle region of the molecule(s) tend to become reactive only during the axonal transport. (3) A crossreaction between tissue-bound antigen and antibodies recognizing the above cited discontinuous determinant indicates an appropriate bending of the molecule even in case of severe molecular differences, e.g., in lamprey form of GnRH. (4) It follows that in phylogenetic studies, an immunologically well characterized antiserum can be substituted for a species-directed antiserum.  相似文献   

10.
Analysis of gene expression using gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antisense oligonucleotide confirmed by immunocytochemical localization the occurrence of GnRH neurons along the nervus terminalis in the steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Double-label immunocytochemistry revealed the distribution of mammalian (m), salmon (s) and chicken II (cII)-type GnRHs and various pituitary hormones. Both sGnRH and mGnRH appeared to be colocalized in the same cells of the nervus terminalis. Chicken GnRH II-immunoreactivity was found only in fibers and terminals. In the younger fish [73 and 186 days after fertilization (DAF)] GnRH neurons were seen rostral to the olfactory bulb. A novel GnRH ganglion, along the nervus terminalis, was found at the cribriform bone (gCB). A few non-immunoreactive rounded cells were seen among the GnRH neurons. A second smaller ganglion was seen at the most rostrally located part of the ventromedial olfactory bulb (gROB). In the older fish (850 DAF) GnRH neurons were also observed in the basal forebrain. A small group of neurons (2–3 cells), at the caudoventromedial border of the olfactory bulb, formed the ganglion terminale. Occasionally isolated GnRH-immunoreactive cells were seen at the base of the olfactory epithelium, along the ventromedial margins of the olfactory nerve. GnRH-immunoreactive and GnRH mRNA expressing neurons were absent from midbrain regions at the ages observed. GnRH-immunoreactive fibers were present only in older fish. The pattern of distribution of fibers that were immunoreactive to all three forms of GnRH was identical. Fibers were seen along the medial side of the olfactory nerve, throughout the brain and in the pituitary, associated with growth hormone and somatolactin cells. This morphological study shows that molecular forms of GnRHs might have multiple functions.  相似文献   

11.
Evolution of a Neuropeptide Family: Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
SYNOPSIS. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), a small peptidein the brain, is essential for reproduction. It is now clearthat GnRH is part of a family of closely related molecules.The primary structure has been identified for 4 GnRH molecules:mammalian, chicken I, chicken II and salmon. During evolutionthe molecule has been conserved in length, terminal amino acidstructure, 70–90% of amino acid sequence and the His2Trp3residues,residues, which are important in the release of gonadotropin.Alterations have occurred in positions 5, 7 and 8, regions thoughtto be involved in receptor binding. The receptors for GnRH haveapparently evolved also in that the mammalian and avian receptorsvary considerably in their ability to bind different GnRH molecules.Other GnRH family members have been distinguished indirectlyby chromatographic or immunological means; 3 different GnRH-likemolecules are present, respectively, in lamprey, sturgeon andsalmon (a second form). Several GnRH-like molecules includingthose in chondrichthyes have not yet been distinguished fromthe proposed salmon II molecule. The lamprey GnRH-like moleculemay be a nodal point inthe analysis of the ancestral molecule;hagfish do not contain a detectable GnRH molecule. The elucidationof the GnRH precursor molecule in human placenta showed thepresence of a 53-amino-acid gene-related peptide of unknownfunction, but did not reveal the basis for expression of multipleGnRH forms in many nonmammalian species. GnRH has a varietyof novel functions in addition to release of gonadotropin fromthe pituitary. During evolution certain functions such as thosein the retina and sympathetic ganglia have apparently disappearedin amniotes, but GnRH placental functions have appeared in mammals.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Three polyclonal antisera raised in rabbits against the mammalian molecular form of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) were tested in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for crossreactivity with naturally occurring GnRHs and with GnRH analogues. Antisera were then tested immunocytochemically in order (i) to identify amino acids essential for the binding of each antiserum, and (ii) to evaluate the specificity of the immunocytochemical reaction in brain sections from various species of cyclostomes, amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Antiserum GnRH 80/1, recognizing mainly a discontinuous determinant including the NH2- and COOH-termini, crossreacts with GnRHs the molecular bending of which enables the spatial approach of both terminal amino acid residues. Antiserum GnRH 80/2, by requiring the COOH-terminus for binding and not tolerating substitutions by aromatic amino acids in the middle region of the molecule, recognizes chicken I GnRH, however, not the salmon form. The use of this antiserum is appropriate in species synthesizing the mammalian and/or the chicken I form of GnRH. GnRH antiserum 81/1 is specific mostly for mammalian GnRH. The results obtained by ELISAs are confirmed by immunocytochemical studies. A comparison between the results obtained in ELISA and in immunocytochemistry involving mammalian-, chicken I-, chicken II-, salmon-, and lamprey-directed GnRH antisera resulted in the following conclusions: (1) An antiserum recognizing the discontinuous antigen determinant including both NH2- and COOH-termini may be reactive in most vertebrate brain sections thus being appropriate for phylogenetically directed immunocytochemical studies. (2) Moreover, this discontinuous determinant seems to be immunocytochemically reactive in all parts of the neurons in the GnRH system, whereas, in some species, determinants located in the middle region of the molecule(s) tend to become reactive only during the axonal transport. (3) A crossreaction between tissue-bound antigen and antibodies recognizing the above cited discontinuous determinant indicates an appropriate bending of the molecule even in case of severe molecular differences, e.g., in lamprey form of GnRH. (4) It follows that in phylogenetic studies, an immunologically well characterized antiserum can be substituted for a species-directed antiserum.  相似文献   

13.
Complementary DNAs encoding gonadotropin‐releasing hormone (GnRH) precursors were cloned from the mummichog Fundulus heteroclitus brain, showing that this species has three GnRH forms, i.e. medaka Oryzias latipes GnRH (mdGnRH), chicken GnRH‐II (cGnRH‐II) and Atlantic salmon Salmo salar GnRH (sGnRH). The F. heteroclitus prepro GnRHs have common structural architectures of vertebrate GnRHs, consisting of the signal peptide, 10 amino acids of mature peptide, GKR sequence and GnRH‐associated peptide (GAP). Phylogenetic analysis of fish prepro GnRHs showed that F. heteroclitus mdGnRH is a homologue of sbGnRHs and mdGnRHs of other acanthopterygian. Quantitative real‐time PCR revealed that mdGnRH was abundantly expressed in the olfactory bulb and in olfactory lobe areas and is expressed in the pituitary. The cGnRH‐II was mainly expressed in the midbrain and interbrain areas, and the sGnRH was expressed not only in the olfactory bulb but also in other regions of the brain. These results suggest that the mdGnRH is involved in the stimulation of gonadotrophs in the pituitary, whereas cGnRH‐II and sGnRH are involved in neurotransmission and neuromodulation.  相似文献   

14.
Apoptosis is a form of cell death, characterized by morphological and biochemical changes. Apoptosis occurs in the normal testis and in response to different agents. In this study, we investigated the effect of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in testicular apoptosis in the goldfish. GnRH is a decapeptide that is expressed in different tissues, including gonads in mammalian and non-mammalian species. While GnRH is considered to be a paracrine mediator of ovarian follicular atresia, the role of GnRH in the testis is less clear. In the present study, treatments with native salmon GnRH and chicken GnRH-II increased DNA fragmentation (a hallmark of apoptosis) in the mature goldfish testis. On the other hand, gonadotropin hormone was found to act as survival factor, by decreasing spontaneous and GnRH-induced DNA fragmentation in the goldfish testis. The results demonstrate that GnRH plays an important paracrine role in the control of apoptosis in the goldfish testis.  相似文献   

15.
Perciforms have three forms of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in their brain. All three GnRHs are potent secretogogues for luteinizing hormone (LH) from the pituitary. The pivotal role of GnRH-R-GnRH interactions in reproductive homeostasis is well established; however, there is a paucity of information on how a GnRH-R responds to the three endogenous GnRH forms in a perciform species. In this study, a recombinant pituitary GnRH-R from striped bass (stb) was expressed in a mammalian cell line (COS-7) and a fish cell line (CHSE-214). Activation of the signaling pathways was monitored by reporter gene (luciferase) based assays, which were specific for cAMP-PKA or Ca 2+/calmodulin kinase (activated via c-fos promoter) signaling pathways. The stbGnRH-R expressed in two different cell lines triggered different downstream signaling in response to the treatments with chicken (c) GnRH II. Interestingly, when endogenous GnRHs were used in combinations, the luciferase activity was significantly attenuated in transfected CHSE-214 cells.  相似文献   

16.
1. Brain extract from the spotted ratfish, Hydrolagus colliei, contains gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-like peptides in both sexes. 2. The dominant form occurs with a concentration of 0.5-1.7 ng/g frozen brain tissue in males, and 1.3-2.5 ng/g in females. 3. A similar pattern of GnRH immunoreactivity and chromatographic behaviour are found in both sexes. 4. A semipurified extract of this peptide could not be distinguished chromatographically from either chicken II or salmon II forms of the peptide. 5. The ratfish represents the most primitive organism that contains a form of GnRH that coelutes with chicken II and salmon II GnRH.  相似文献   

17.
As a major actor of the brain-pituitary-gonad axis, GnRH has received considerable attention, mainly in vertebrates. Biochemical, molecular, neuroanatomical, pharmacological and physiological studies have mainly focused on the role of GnRH as a gonadotrophin-releasing factor and have led to a detailed knowledge of the hypophysiotrophic GnRH system, primarily in mammals, but also in fish. It is now admitted that the corresponding neurons develop from the olfactory epithelium and migrate into the forebrain during embryogenesis to establish connections with the median eminence in tetrapods or the pituitary in teleost fish. However, all vertebrates possess a second GnRH system, expressing a variant known as chicken GnRH-II in neurons of the synencephalon, whose functions are still under debate. In addition, many fish species express a third form, salmon GnRH, whose expression is restricted to neurons of the olfactory systems and the ventral telencephalon, with extensive projections in the brain and a minor contribution to the pituitary. In vertebrates, GnRHs are also expressed in the gonads where they act on cell proliferation and steroidogenesis in males, and apoptosis of granulosa cells and reinititaion of meiosis in females. These functions could possibly represent the primitive roles of GnRH-like peptides, as an increasing number of studies in invertebrate classes point to a more or less direct connection between GnRH-producing sensory neurons and the gonads. According to recent studies, GnRHs appear as very ancient peptides that emerged at least in the cnidarians, the first animals with a nervous system. GnRH-like peptides have been partially characterized in several classes of invertebrates notably in molluscs, echinoderms and prochordates in which effects on the reproductive functions, notably gamete release and steroidogeneis, have been evidenced. It is possible that, with the increasing complexity of metozoa, GnRH neurons have lost their direct connection with the gonad to specialize in the control of additional regulatory centers such as the hypophysis in vertebrates or the optic gland in cephalopods. However, reminiscent effects of GnRH functions at the gonadal level would have persisted due to local production of GnRHs in the gonad itself. Altogether, these data indicate that GnRHs were involved in the control of reproduction long before the appearance of pituitary gonadotrophs.  相似文献   

18.
Multiple forms of GnRH within individual brains may have different functions. However, some vertebrates such as salmonids continue to reproduce even though they have lost or do not express 1 of the 3 forms of GnRH found in most other teleosts. We examined a basal salmonid, lake whitefish, to determine the mechanism by which a reduction in the number of GnRH forms occurs. We identified for the first time 3 distinct GnRHs in a salmonid. One form is novel and is designated whitefish GnRH. The primary structure is pGlu-His-Trp-Ser-Tyr-Gly-Met-Asn-Pro-Gly-NH(2). HPLC and RIA were used for purification followed by Edman degradation for sequence determination. Mass spectroscopy was used to confirm the sequence and amidation of the peptide. The other 2 forms, salmon GnRH and chicken GnRH-II, are identical to the 2 forms found in salmon, which evolved later than whitefish. Synthetic whitefish GnRH is biologically active, as it increased mRNA expression of growth hormone and the alpha-subunit for LH and thyroid-stimulating hormone in dispersed fish pituitary cells. Our data support the hypothesis that the ancestral salmonid had a third GnRH form when the genome doubled (tetraploidization), but the third form was lost later in some salmonids due to chromosomal rearrangements. We suggest that the salmon GnRH form compensated for the loss of the third form.  相似文献   

19.
In the brain of all vertebrate classes, chicken (c) GnRH-II ([His(5), Trp(7),Tyr(8)]GnRH, cGnRH-II) is expressed in the mesencephalon. In addition, at least one other form of GnRH is expressed in the preoptical area/hypothalamus. In the human pituitary stalk and the mouse median eminence, cGnRH-II is present together with mammalian GnRH. Similarly, in the pituitary of several teleost fish (e.g., goldfish and eel, but not salmon or trout), a teleost GnRH is found together with cGnRH-II. These GnRHs are not colocalized in the same cells. Hence, these GnRH peptides may differentially regulate gonadotropin secretion and, in addition, may exert their effects simultaneously. The current study therefore investigated the effects of combinations of the two forms of GnRH present in the African catfish (Clarias gariepinus) pituitary-cGnRH-II and catfish GnRH ([His(5),Asn(8)]GnRH, cfGnRH)-on the cytosolic free calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in single, Fura-2-loaded catfish gonadotrophs, as well as their effects on both in vitro and in vivo LH secretion. Both inhibitory and stimulatory effects of combinations of cfGnRH and cGnRH-II on [Ca(2+)](i) were observed, which were mirrored by their effects on both in vitro and in vivo LH secretion. The following pattern became apparent. The effect of intermediate or maximal effective cfGnRH doses was inhibited by the simultaneous presence of subthreshold or borderline effective cGnRH-II doses. Conversely, subthreshold or borderline effective concentrations of cfGnRH enhanced the effects of intermediate and maximal concentrations of cGnRH-II. In addition, combinations of cfGnRH and cGnRH-II concentrations that were equally active when tested separately showed an additive effect. The observed interactions between the two GnRHs may be of particular physiological relevance in the control of seasonal LH levels in the African catfish, as well as in other teleost species. Moreover, the occurrence of mutual inhibitory and stimulatory interactions between endogenous GnRHs may be a widespread aspect of GnRH action in vertebrates.  相似文献   

20.
Two molecular forms of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) were demonstrated in hypothalamic extracts of M. domestica using high performance liquid chromatography and radioimmunoassay with specific GnRH antisera. One form eluted in the same position as synthetic mammalian GnRH and was quantified equally by two mammalian GnRH antisera, while the second form coeluted with synthetic chicken GnRH II and was quantified equally with two chicken GnRH II antisera. The finding of chicken GnRH II in a South American species of marsupial, which has previously been reported in some Australian species of marsupial and in species of Aves, Reptilia, Amphibia, Osteichthyes and Chondrichthyes, supports our hypothesis that this widespread structural variant may represent an early evolved and conserved form of GnRH.  相似文献   

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