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1.
The influence of GnRH pulse frequency on LH subunit mRNA concentrations was examined in castrate, testosterone-replaced male rats. GnRH pulses (25 ng/pulse) or saline to controls, were given via a carotid cannula at intervals of 7.5-240 min for 48 h. alpha and LH beta mRNA concentrations were 109 +/- 23 and 30 +/- 5 pg cDNA bound/100 micrograms pituitary DNA, respectively, in saline controls. GnRH pulse intervals of 15, 30, and 60 min resulted in elevated alpha and LH beta mRNAs (P less than 0.01) and maximum responses (4-fold, alpha; 3-fold, LH beta) were seen after the 30-min pulses. Acute LH release to the last GnRH pulse was seen after the 15-, 30-, and 60-min pulse intervals. In contrast, LH subunit mRNAs were not increased and acute LH release was markedly impaired after the rapid (7.5 min) or slower (120 and 240 min) pulse intervals. Equalization of total GnRH dose/48 h using the 7.5- and 240-min intervals did not increase LH subunit mRNAs to levels produced by the optimal 30-min interval. These data indicate that the frequency of the pulsatile GnRH stimulus regulates expression of alpha and LH beta mRNAs in male rats. Further, GnRH pulse frequencies that increase subunit mRNA concentrations are associated with continuing LH responsiveness to GnRH.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The inhibitory effects of the potent GnRH antagonist, [Ac-D-pCl-Phe1,2,D-Trp3,D-Arg6,DAla10]GnRH (GnRHant) upon pituitary-gonadal function were investigated in normal and castrated male rats. The antagonist was given a single subcutaneous (s.c.) injections of 1-500 micrograms to 40-60 day old rats which were killed from 1 to 7 days later for assay of pituitary GnRH receptors, gonadal receptors for LH, FSH, and PRL, and plasma gonadotropins, PRL, and testosterone (T). In intact rats treated with low doses of the antagonist (1, 5 or 10 micrograms), available pituitary GnRH receptors were reduced to 40, 30 and 15% of the control values, respectively, with no change in serum gonadotropin, PRL, and T levels. Higher antagonist doses (50, 100 or 500 micrograms) caused more marked decreases in free GnRH receptors, to 8, 4 and 1% of the control values, which were accompanied by dose-related reductions in serum LH and T concentrations. After the highest dose of GnRHant (500 micrograms), serum LH and T levels were completely suppressed at 24 h, and serum levels of the GnRH antagonist were detectable for up to 3 days by radioimmunoassay. The 500 micrograms dose of GnRHant also reduced testicular LH and PRL receptors by 30 and 50% respectively, at 24 h; by 72 h, PRL receptors and LH receptors were still slightly below control values. In castrate rats, treatment with GnRHant reduced pituitary GnRH receptors by 90% and suppressed serum LH and FSH to hypophysectomized levels. Such responses in castrate animals were observed following injection of relatively low doses of GnRHant (100 micrograms), after which the antagonist was detectable in serum for up to 24 h. These data suggest that extensive or complete occupancy of the pituitary receptor population by a GnRH antagonist is necessary to reduce plasma gonadotropin and testosterone levels in intact rats. In castrate animals, partial occupancy of the available GnRH receptor sites appears to be sufficient to inhibit the elevated rate of gonadotropin secretion.  相似文献   

4.
Primary pituitary cell cultures derived from adult male rats were used to explore the direct effects of purified porcine inhibin and follistatin, and recombinant human activin A on FSH beta, as well as LH beta and alpha-subunit mRNA levels. Subunit mRNAs were determined by blot hybridization using alpha, LH beta, and FSH beta cDNA and genomic fragments. Treatment with inhibin for 72 h significantly suppressed alpha and FSH beta mRNA levels with parallel changes in FSH secretion. No change in LH beta mRNA levels was observed. A decrease in FSH beta mRNA to undetectable levels was seen 4 h after inhibin administration. Recombinant human Activin A caused dose-dependent and parallel increases in FSH beta mRNA levels and FSH secretion. This increase was evident at 4 h after activin administration and maintained at longer times. alpha and LH beta mRNA levels remained unchanged. Follistatin addition to cultures for 72 h significantly reduced FSH beta mRNA levels. In a time-course experiment, a reduction in FSH beta mRNA to undetectable levels was observed 24 h after follistatin administration. There were no changes in alpha or LH beta mRNA levels. These data demonstrate that the actions of these gonadal peptides on FSH secretion may be accounted for, at least in part at the level of biosynthesis, by reductions in FSH beta mRNA levels directly at the level of the anterior pituitary gland.  相似文献   

5.
FSH beta, as well as LH beta, and alpha-subunit mRNA levels were examined in the pituitary glands of male rats after sex steroid replacement at various times (7, 28, or 90 days) after orchiectomy. Testosterone propionate, dihydrotestosterone propionate, or 17 beta-estradiol benzoate (E) were administered daily for 7 days before killing, to assess the role of different gonadal steroids on gonadotropin subunit mRNA levels. Subunit mRNAs were determined by blot hybridization using rat FSH beta genomic DNA, and alpha and LH beta cDNAs. At all time points, alpha and LH beta mRNAs increased after gonadectomy and fell toward normal levels with either androgen or estrogen replacement. FSH beta mRNA levels increased variably postcastration: 4-fold at 7 days, 2-fold at 28 days, and 4- to 5-fold at 90 days. Although E replacement uniformly suppressed FSH beta mRNAs, neither testosterone propionate nor dihydrotestosterone propionate administration suppressed FSH beta mRNA levels at any time point after orchiectomy. These data demonstrate that there is a relative lack of negative regulation of FSH beta mRNA levels by androgens in a paradigm in which E administration results in marked negative regulation of FSH beta mRNA levels. Thus, in the male rat, estrogens negatively regulate all three gonadotropin subunit mRNA levels while androgens negative regulate LH beta and alpha-subunit but fail to suppress FSH beta mRNAs.  相似文献   

6.
Changes in the frequency of GnRH and LH pulses have been shown to occur between the luteal and preovulatory periods in the ovine estrous cycle. We examined the effect of these different frequencies of GnRH pulses on pituitary concentrations of LH and FSH subunit mRNAs. Eighteen ovariectomized ewes were implanted with progesterone to eliminate endogenous GnRH release during the nonbreeding season. These animals then received 3 ng/kg body weight GnRH in frequencies of once every 4, 1, or 0.5 h for 4 days. These frequencies represent those observed during the luteal and follicular phases, and the preovulatory LH and FSH surge of the ovine estrous cycle, respectively. On day 4, the ewes were killed and their anterior pituitary glands were removed for measurements of pituitary LH, FSH, and their subunit mRNAs. Pituitary content of LH and FSH, as assessed by RIA, did not change (P greater than 0.10) in response to the three different GnRH pulse frequencies. However, subunit mRNA concentrations, assessed by solution hybridization assays and expressed as femtomoles per mg total RNA, did change as a result of different GnRH frequencies. alpha mRNA concentrations were higher (P less than 0.05) when the GnRH pulse frequency was 1/0.5 h and 1 h, whereas LH beta and FSH beta mRNA concentrations were maximal (P less than 0.05) only at a pulse frequency of 1/h. Additionally, pituitary LH and FSH secretory response to GnRH on day 4 was maximal (P = 0.05) when the pulse infusion was 1/h.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
9.
The effects of GnRH pulse amplitude, frequency, and treatment duration on pituitary alpha and LH beta subunit mRNA concentrations were examined in castrate-testosterone replaced male rats. Experimental groups received iv GnRH pulses (5, 25, or 125 ng) at 7.5-, 30-, or 120-min intervals for 8, 24, or 48 h. Saline pulses were given to control rats. Acute LH secretion was measured in blood drawn before and 20 min after the last GnRH pulse. In saline controls, alpha and LH beta mRNAs (150 +/- 14, 23 +/- 2 pg cDNA bound/100 micrograms pituitary DNA) fell to 129 +/- 14 and 18 +/- 2, respectively, after 48 h. In animals receiving GnRH pulses (7.5-min intervals), the 125-ng dose stimulated a slight increase (P less than 0.01) in alpha mRNA levels after 8 and 24 h and both LH subunit mRNAs were increased by the 25- and 125-ng doses after 48 h. The 30-min pulse interval injections (25- and 125-ng doses) increased LH beta mRNA levels after 8 h, but alpha mRNAs were not elevated until after 24 h. Maximum (3-fold) increases in alpha and LH beta mRNAs were seen in rats receiving 25-ng pulses every 30 min for 48 h. Using 120-min pulses, LH subunit mRNAs were not increased by any GnRH dose through 48 h. Acute LH release was not seen in rats receiving 5 ng GnRH pulses at any pulse interval.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Striped bass are seasonal breeding fish, spawning once a year during the spring. All 3-yr-old males are sexually mature; however, 60-64% of the fish mature earlier as 1- or 2-yr-old animals. The endocrine basis underlying early maturity in 2-yr-old males was studied at the molecular level by monitoring changes in pituitary beta FSH and beta LH mRNA levels by ribonuclease protection assay, and correlating these changes to stages of testicular development. In maturing males, the mRNA levels of beta FSH were elevated during early spermatogenesis, whereas beta LH mRNA levels peaked during spermiation. The appearance of spermatozoa in the testis was associated with a decrease in beta FSH mRNA and a rise in beta LH mRNA abundance. Immature males had lower levels of beta LH mRNA than maturing males, but there were no differences in beta FSH mRNA levels between immature and maturing males. The regulation of gonadotropin gene expression in 2-yr-old males was studied by the chronic administration of GnRH analogue (GnRHa) and testosterone (T), with or without pimozide (P) supplementation. In immature males, the combination of T and GnRHa stimulated a three- to fivefold increase in beta FSH and beta LH mRNA levels, but the same treatment had no effect on gonadotropin gene expression in maturing males. In addition, the coadministration of P to immature males suppressed the stimulatory effect of GnRHa and T on beta FSH and beta LH mRNA levels, suggesting that dopamine may have a novel role in regulating gonadotropin gene expression.  相似文献   

11.
Decreased gonadotropin responsiveness (downregulation) to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) following chronic in vivo and in vitro exposure to GnRH or its agonist (GnRH-A) has been previously reported. In the present studies, changes in LH subunit mRNAs in rat pituitary monolayer culture during stimulatory and down regulatory phases of GnRH action are described. Rat pituitary cells in culture, pretreated with medium alone or GnRH-A (10(-6) M) for 48 h were extensively washed and treated with graded concentrations of GnRH [10(-9) to 10(-7)] for 4 h. Medium was assayed for luteinizing hormone (LH) immunoreactivity, and total cytoplasmic RNAs were extracted by the hot phenol-guanidinium isothiocyanate method. Subunit-specific mRNAs were quantified by dot-hybridization assay using 32P-labeled subunit-specific cDNA probes. Cells pretreated with medium alone showed a dose-dependent increase in medium LH immunoreactivity, but the alpha and LH beta mRNAs showed no change over the 4-h period. Cells pretreated with GnRH-A showed no significant increase in medium LH with GnRH treatment, thus demonstrating that the cells had been desensitized by prior GnRH-A treatment. Alpha and LH beta subunit mRNAs of cells pretreated with GnRH-A did not show any significant change with further GnRH treatment. In subsequent experiments, cells were incubated with medium alone or 10(-7) M GnRH for 4, 8, or 24 h. GnRH failed to increase subunit mRNAs after 4 and 8 h incubation; after 24 h, alpha subunit mRNA showed a modest but significant increase and beta subunit mRNA showed a modest decrease compared to controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Patterns of gonadotropin storage in individual gonadotropes change with alterations in the physiological state. After castration in the male rat, there is a 2.5-fold increase in the percentage of gonadotropes and an increase in the proportion of gonadotropes storing both LH and FSH. In addition, there are 6- to 8-fold increases in the pituitary concentrations of LH beta subunit mRNAs. In order to determine whether these changes are due to increases in the number of gonadotropes containing subunit mRNA, or the amount of mRNA per cell or both, an in situ hybridization technique using a photobiotinylated rat LH beta cRNA probe (bio-LH beta-cRNA) was applied to detect LH beta mRNA in fixed whole rat pituitary cells from intact or castrated rats. After hybridization, the bio-LH beta-cRNA was localized with either avidin-biotin peroxidase complex or the fluorescent streptavidin phycoprobe methods. The cells containing LH beta mRNA were then counted and the amount of mRNA per cell was measured by video microdensitometry. Ten percent of the anterior pituitary cells from intact animals contained LH beta mRNA. After castration (2-4 weeks) this percentage rose to 19-24.5%. Image and microdensitometric analyses showed that castration produced a 1.9-fold increase in the amount of LH beta mRNA per cell, and a 2.2-fold increase in the area of cells containing LH beta mRNA. Hence, castration resulted in an increase in the level of LH beta mRNA per cell as well as the number of LH beta mRNA-containing cells. When in situ hybridization was followed by immunocytochemistry in cells from intact rats, 83% of gonadotropes that stained for LH beta and 80% of gonadotropes that stained for FSH beta contained LH beta mRNA whereas after castration 99% of LH-storing and 93% of FSH-storing cells contained LH beta mRNA. This new in situ hybridization protocol is rapid and allows quantification of mRNA within individual gonadotropes. In addition, since the hybridization protocol does not apparently alter the gonadotropin antigens, the hormone content of the same gonadotrope may be defined by immunocytochemistry.  相似文献   

13.
Previous work with female rats showed that serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) are suppressed by gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonists less than are levels of serum luteinizing hormone (LH), suggesting a lesser dependency of FSH on GnRH stimulation. The differential regulation of LH and FSH is known to have some aspects that are sexually asymmetrical, and it was of interest to see if males also show differential gonadotropin suppressibility after injection of an antagonist to GnRH. Male rats were prepared for serial sampling 4 wk after castration. After a blood sample was removed at Time Zero, [Ac-3-Pro1, pF-D-Phe2, -D-Trp3,6]-GnRH (Antag) was injected subcutaneously in oil; doses were 0, 4, 20, 100, 500, and 2500 micrograms. Blood was sampled at 2, 5, 12, 24 and 36 h postinjection. All doses above 4 micrograms had lowered LH levels by 2 h, and LH remained suppressed for 12 to 24 h at the three higher doses. By contrast, serum FSH was unaffected by any dose at 5 h, and was only marginally suppressed by the highest doses thereafter. As in females, therefore, FSH secretion in male rats appears not to be as dependent on GnRH as is LH secretion.  相似文献   

14.
Male (N = 8) and female (N = 8) pigs were assigned to receive saline or a potent GnRH antagonist ([Ac-D2Nal1,D4-Cl-Phe2,D-Trp3,D-Arg6, D-Ala10]- GnRH*HOAc; 1 mg/kg body weight) at 14 days of age. The GnRH antagonist caused LH to decline (P less than 0.01) from 1.7 ng/ml at 0 h to less than 0.5 ng/ml during 4-32 h in males and females. Concentrations of FSH in gilts declined slowly from 75 +/- 8 to 56 +/- 5 ng/ml (P less than 0.05) at 32 h. In males FSH was low (5.7 +/- 0.5 ng/ml) at 0 h and did not change significantly. To observe the effect of long-term treatment with GnRH antagonist, 10 male and 10 female pigs, 3 days of age, were treated with saline or 1 mg GnRH antagonist per kg body weight every 36 h for 21 days. Concentrations of LH were reduced (P less than 0.01) to 0.2-0.4 ng/ml throughout the experimental period in male and female piglets treated with GnRH antagonist. Plasma FSH increased in control females, but remained suppressed (P less than 0.001) in females treated with GnRH antagonist. Treatment with the GnRH antagonist suppressed FSH levels in males on Days 8 and 16 (P less than 0.05), but not on Day 24. Treatment of females with the GnRH antagonist did not influence (P greater than 0.10) oestradiol-17 beta concentrations. Administration of GnRH antagonist to males suppressed testosterone and oestradiol-17 beta values (P less than 0.01) and reduced testicular weight (P less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
We have shown previously that androgens negatively regulate LH alpha and beta-subunit mRNA levels, but have little or no effect on FSH beta mRNA levels in rats in vivo. In contrast, estrogen negatively regulates all three gonadotropin subunit mRNA levels in vivo. We have examined the effects of these sex steroids on gonadotropin subunit synthesis directly at the level of the pituitary gland by using cultured rat pituitary cells. Adult female and male rat pituitaries were dissected, dispersed enzymatically, and maintained in culture for 2 days. At that time, cells were treated for varying lengths of time with either medium alone or sex-steroid hormone treatments (estradiol or testosterone). Dose-response and time-course experiments were performed. Cells were then harvested and total RNA was extracted. Gonadotropin subunit mRNA levels were assessed by blot hybridization techniques. Sex-steroid hormones were added to achieve final concentrations ranging from 10(-12) to 10(-6) M for dose response experiments and 10(-8) M for time-course experiments. Testosterone treatment (10(-8) M) increased FSH beta mRNA levels 3-fold in females (P less than 0.01) and males (P less than 0.05), but had no effect on alpha or LH beta mRNA levels in either sex. Dose-related increases in FSH beta mRNA levels with increasing concentrations of testosterone were observed in both female and male pituitary cell cultures. Time-course studies revealed that the testosterone-stimulated increases in FSH beta mRNA levels are statistically significant by 12 h and 6 h after hormone addition in female and male cultures, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Progesterone and certain corticosteroids, such as deoxycorticosterone (DOC) and triamcinolone acetonide (TA), can stimulate gonadotropin surges in rats. The mechanism of these steroids could involve a pituitary or hypothalamic site of action, or both. Progesterone and TA did not alter the ability of GnRH to release LH or FSH either before, during, or after the gonadotropin surge induced by these steroids in estrogen-primed ovariectomized female rats. Furthermore, progesterone, TA and DOC were unable to induce a gonadotropin surge in short-term estrogen-primed castrated male rats. These results suggested a hypothalamic rather than a pituitary site of action of progesterone and corticosteroids in the release of gonadotropins. Since progestin and corticosteroid receptors are present in catecholamine neurons, a role for catecholamine neurotransmission in progesterone and corticosteroid-induced surges of LH and FSH in estrogen-primed ovariectomized rats was examined. Catecholamine synthesis inhibitors and specific alpha 1 (prazosin), alpha 2 (yohimbine), and beta (propranolol) receptor antagonists were used to determine the role of catecholamine neurotransmission in the steroid-induced surges of LH and FSH. Both of the catecholamine synthesis inhibitors, alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine HCl (alpha-MPT), a tyrosine hydroxylase inhibitor, and sodium diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC), an inhibitor of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase, attenuated the ability of progesterone, TA, and DOC to induce LH surges when administered 3 h and 1 h, respectively, before the steroid. DDC also suppressed the ability of progesterone, TA, and DOC to induce FSH surges. Rats treated with alpha-MPT had lower mean FSH values than did steroid controls, but the effect was not significant. Both the alpha 1 and alpha 2 adrenergic antagonists, prazosin and yohimbine, significantly suppressed the ability of progesterone, TA, and DOC to induce LH and FSH surges. In contrast, the beta adrenergic receptor blocker, propranolol, had no effect upon the ability of progesterone, TA, or DOC to facilitate LH and FSH secretion. Finally, the stimulatory effect of progesterone and TA upon LH and FSH release was found to be blocked by prior treatment with a GnRH antagonist, further suggesting hypothalamic involvement. In conclusion, this study provides evidence that the stimulation of gonadotropin release by progesterone and corticosteroids is mediated through a common mechanism, and that this mechanism involves the release of GnRH, most likely through catecholaminergic stimulation. Furthermore, catecholamine neurotransmission, through alpha 1 and alpha 2 but not beta receptor sites, is required for the expression of progesterone and corticosteroid-induced surges of LH and FSH in estrogen-primed ovariectomized rats.  相似文献   

17.
To examine the effects of gonadal steroids on the pretranslational regulation of the gonadotropin subunits in the female, adult female rats, beginning 7 or 28 days after ovariectomy, received daily injections of testosterone propionate (T), dihydrotestosterone propionate (D), or estradiol benzoate (E) for 7 days. Intact cycling females and ovariectomized rats that received vehicle served as controls. Serum was obtained for LH and FSH levels to assess changes in gonadotropin secretion. Total RNA from individual rats was recovered and analyzed by blot hybridization with specific radiolabeled cDNA probes for the alpha, LH beta, and FSH beta subunits. Autoradiographic bands were quantitated and standardized to mRNA levels in the intact animals. Ovariectomy resulted in a rise in serum gonadotropin levels and all three gonadotropin subunit mRNA levels. Estrogen replacement resulted in suppression of alpha, LH beta, and FSH beta mRNAs whether given at 7 or 28 days after ovariectomy. In contrast, whereas androgen replacement decreased alpha and LH beta mRNAs, D or T did not consistently suppress FSH beta mRNAs. We conclude that chronic estrogen administration to the castrated female rat uniformly suppresses all three gonadotropin subunit mRNA levels. In female rats, as in male rats, chronic androgen administration fails to negatively regulate FSH beta mRNAs.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) to elevate cellular levels of mRNA for beta-subunit of luteinizing hormone (LH) has been examined in monolayer cultures from rat pituitary. Low concentrations of GnRH (100 pM) induced a 6.8-fold increase in LH-beta mRNA, while higher concentrations of GnRH were less effective. The low concentrations of GnRH (100 pM) did not result in altered GnRH receptor levels (92 +/- 12% compared to controls) after 24 h treatment but did increase protein kinase C activity to 249 +/- 16%. The protein kinase C activator, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, at concentrations (2-20 nM) which did not deplete protein kinase C, stimulated LH-beta mRNA levels 2-5-fold after 24 h. Higher concentrations of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, which depleted protein kinase C activity, substantially reduced the ability of 100 pM GnRH to stimulate increases in LH-beta mRNA levels. As previously observed, protein kinase C-depleted cells exhibited normal LH release in response to GnRH stimulation. These studies demonstrate that low concentrations of GnRH may have an important role in regulation of gonadotropin biosynthesis. Furthermore, the results suggest that activation of protein kinase C is sufficient to stimulate increases in LH-beta mRNA levels and that protein kinase C is necessary for normal GnRH stimulation of LH-beta mRNA levels. Accordingly, we postulate that protein kinase C may mediate the action of GnRH on LH-beta mRNA levels.  相似文献   

19.
This study was carried out to test the hypothesis that reduced hypothalamic GnRH release is responsible for the suppression of reproductive functions during starvation. Adult male rats were kept for 4 days under total fasting (only water allowed) and injected during this time at 2-h intervals with 100 or 500 ng/kg BW of GnRH or vehicle. Serum levels of LH and FSH decreased by 30% during starvation (p less than 0.05), and these effects were fully reversed by either dose of GnRH treatment. Starvation reduced the pituitary mRNA contents of the gonadotropin common alpha- and FSH beta-subunits by 30% and 35% in starved animals (p less than 0.05 for both), but the LH beta-subunit mRNA was unaffected. The GnRH treatments partly or totally reversed these changes, but up-regulation of the mRNA levels by GnRH was seen only in controls fed ad libitum. Starvation reduced the testicular and serum levels of testosterone by 84% (p less than 0.01) and 42% (p less than 0.05), respectively. These changes were fully reversed by the 500-ng/kg dose of GnRH treatment during fasting, but only serum T was completely reversed by the 100-ng/kg GnRH treatment. To elucidate whether fasting per se had direct effects at the gonadal level, we blocked the secretion of gonadotropins by treatment with a GnRH antagonist, and replaced the gonadotropins by injecting of hCG (10 IU/kg BW once daily) and hFSH (75 IU/kg BW once daily). No differences were observed between starved and control animals in either testicular or serum levels of T, or in accessory sex gland weights.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
In mice deficient in progesterone receptor (PR), follicles of ovulatory size develop but fail to ovulate, providing evidence for an essential role for progesterone and PR in ovulation in mice. However, little is known about the expression and regulation of PR mRNA in preovulatory follicles of ruminant species. One objective of this study was to determine whether and when PR mRNA is expressed in bovine follicular cells during the periovulatory period. Luteolysis and the LH/FSH surge were induced with prostaglandin F(2alpha) and a GnRH analogue, respectively, and the preovulatory follicle was obtained at 0, 3.5, 6, 12, 18, or 24 h after GnRH treatment. RNase protection assays revealed a transient increase in levels of PR mRNA, which peaked at 6 h after GnRH and declined to the time 0 value by 12 h and a second increase at 24 h. The second objective was to investigate the mechanisms that regulate PR mRNA expression through in vitro studies on follicular cells of preovulatory follicles obtained before the LH/FSH surge. Theca and granulosa cells were isolated and cultured with or without a luteinizing dose of LH or FSH, progesterone, LH + progesterone, or LH + antiprogestin (RU486). Levels of PR mRNA increased in a time-dependent manner in granulosa cells cultured with LH or FSH and in theca cells cultured with LH, peaking at 10 h of culture. In contrast, progesterone (200 ng/ml) did not upregulate mRNA for its own receptor, and neither progesterone nor RU486 affected LH-stimulated PR mRNA accumulation. Furthermore, RU486 completely blocked LH-stimulated expression of oxytocin mRNA, indicating that PR induced by LH in vitro is functional. These results show that the gonadotropin surge induces a rapid and transient increase in expression of PR mRNA in both theca and granulosa cells of bovine periovulatory follicles followed by a second rise close to the time of ovulation and that the first increase in PR mRNA can be mimicked in vitro by gonadotropins but not by progesterone. These results suggest multiple and time-dependent roles for progesterone and PR in the regulation of periovulatory events in cattle.  相似文献   

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