首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 24 毫秒
1.
P M Wise 《Life sciences》1982,31(2):165-173
The purpose of the following study was to assess the changes in the proestrous hormone profile in middle-aged cycling rats to better understand the inter-relationship and possible interaction of these hormones during the transition to estrous acyclicity. Median eminence LHRH concentrations and serum LH, FSH, estradiol and progesterone concentrations were measured in young (3-4 months old) and middle-aged (8-10 months old) proestrous rats at 0900, 1200, 1500 and 1800h. The data demonstrate that (1) baseline hormone concentrations prior to the surge at 0900h are the same in middle-aged and young rats; (2) the proestrous gonadotropin surge is temporally delayed in middle-aged rats; (3) this delay is preceded by lower median eminence LHRH concentrations and serum estradiol concentrations at 1200h; (4) serum progesterone concentrations are lower in middle-aged rats during the preovulatory gonadotropin surge (at 1500 and 1800h) probably as a consequence of the delayed LH surge.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of 5 alpha-dihydroprogesterone (5 alpha-DHP) on gonadotropin release was examined in the immature acutely ovariectomized (OVX) rat primed with a low dose of estradiol (E2). Treatment with various doses of 5 alpha-DHP given in combination with E2 increased levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) but had no effect on serum luteinizing hormone (LH). A single injection of a maximally stimulating dose of 5 alpha-DHP (0.4 mg/kg) stimulated increases in serum FSH at 1200 h and, 6 h later, at 1800 h. Pituitary LH and FSH content was dramatically enhanced by 1600 h and levels remained elevated at 1800 h. The administration of pentobarbital at 1200 h, versus 1400 h or 1600 h, prevented the increase in basal serum FSH levels at 1800 h, implying that the release of hypothalamic LH releasing hormone (LHRH) is modulated by 5 alpha-DHP. In addition, changes in pituitary sensitivity to LHRH as a result of 5 alpha-DHP were measured and a significant increase in the magnitude of FSH release was observed at 1200 h and 1800 h. Although the LH response to LHRH in 5 alpha-DHP-treated rats was not different from controls, the duration of LH release was lengthened. These results suggest that 5 alpha-DHP may stimulate FSH release by a direct action at the pituitary level. Together, these observations support the theory that 5 alpha-DHP mediates the facilitative effect of progesterone on FSH secretion and further suggests an action of 5 alpha-DHP in this phenomenon at both pituitary and hypothalamic sites.  相似文献   

3.
D W Brann  C D Putnam  V B Mahesh 《Steroids》1991,56(2):103-111
The stimulatory and inhibitory effects of progesterone on luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion were found to be dependent on the length of estrogen exposure in ovariectomized estrogen-primed rats. Progesterone suppressed LH and FSH secretion when administered 16 hours after a single injection of estradiol to ovariectomized rats. If the estradiol treatment was extended over 40 hours by two injections of estradiol 24 hours apart, progesterone administration led to a highly significant elevation of both serum LH and FSH levels 6 hours later. In addition to the direct stimulatory effect on LH and FSH release, progesterone, when injected 1 hour before, was able to antagonize the suppressive effect of a third injection of estradiol on LH and FSH release. In the immature ovariectomized estrogen-primed rat, 10 IU of ACTH brought about a release of progesterone and corticosterone 15 minutes later and LH and FSH 6 hours later. Progesterone, but not corticosterone, appeared to be responsible for the effect of ACTH on gonadotropin release. The synthetic corticosteroid triamcinolone acetonide brought about LH and FSH release in the afternoon, while cortisol, similar to corticosterone, was unable to do so. Nevertheless, triamcinolone acetonide and cortisol brought about increased secretion of FSH the following morning.  相似文献   

4.
Prior experiments have shown that the adipocyte hormone leptin can advance puberty in mice. We hypothesized that it would also stimulate gonadotrophin secretion in adults. Since the secretion of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) is drastically affected by estrogen, we hypothesized that leptin might have different actions dependent on the dose of estrogen. Consequently in these experiments, we tested the effect of injection of leptin into the third cerebral ventricle of ovariectomized animals injected with either the oil diluent, 10 microg or 50 microg of estradiol benzoate 72 hr prior to the experiment. The animals were ovariectomized 3-4 weeks prior to implantation of a cannula into the third ventricle 1 week before the experiments. The day after implantation of an external jugular catheter, blood samples (0. 3 ml) were collected just before and every 10 min for 2 hr after 3V injection of 5 microl of diluent or 10 microg of leptin. Both doses of estradiol benzoate equally decreased plasma LH concentrations and pulse amplitude, but there was a graded decrease in pulse frequency. In contrast, only the 50-microg dose of estradiol benzoate significantly decreased mean plasma FSH concentrations without significantly changing other parameters of FSH release. The number of LH pulses alone and pulses of both hormones together decreased as the dose of estrogen was increased, whereas the number of pulses of FSH alone significantly increased with the higher dose of estradiol benzoate, demonstrating differential control of LH and FSH secretion by estrogen, consistent with alterations in release of luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) and the putative FSH-releasing factor (FSHRF), respectively. The effects of intraventricularly injected leptin were drastically altered by increasing doses of estradiol benzoate. There was no significant effect of intraventricular injection of leptin (10 microg) on the various parameters of either FSH or LH secretion in ovariectomized, oil-injected rats, whereas in those injected with 10 microg of estradiol benzoate there was an increase in the first hr in mean plasma concentration, area under the curve, pulse amplitude, and maximum increase of LH above the starting value (Deltamax) on comparison with the results in the diluent-injected animals in which there was no alteration of these parameters during the 2 hr following injection. The pattern of FSH release was opposite to that of LH and had a different time-course. In the diluent-injected animals, probably because of the stress of injection and frequent blood sampling, there was an initial significant decline in plasma FSH at 20 min after injection, followed by a progressive increase with a significant elevation above the control values at 110 and 120 min. In the leptin-injected animals, mean plasma FSH was nearly constant during the entire experiment, coupled with a significant decrease below values in diluent-injected rats, beginning at 30 min after injection and progressing to a maximal difference at 120 min. Area under the curve, pulse amplitude, and Deltamax of FSH was also decreased in the second hour compared to values in diluent-injected rats. In contrast to the stimulatory effects of intraventricular injection of leptin on pulsatile LH release manifest during the first hour after injection, there was a diametrically opposite, delayed significant decrease in pulsatile FSH release. This differential effect of leptin on FSH and LH release was consistent with differential effects of leptin on LHRH and FSHRF release. Finally, the higher dose of E2 (50 microg) suppressed release of both FSH and LH, but there was little effect of leptin under these conditions, the only effect being a slight (P < 0.04) increase in pulse amplitude of LH in this group of rats. The results indicate that the central effects of leptin on gonadotropin release are strongly dependent on plasma estradiol levels. These effects are consistent w  相似文献   

5.
The effects of hypothalamic lesions designed to destroy either the anterior median eminence (ME) or the posterior and mid-ME on pulsatile release of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) were determined in castrated male rats. In sham-operated animals, mean plasma FSH concentrations rose to peak at 10 min after the onset of sampling, whereas LH declined to a nadir during this time. In the final sample at 120 min, the mean FSH concentrations peaked as LH decreased to its minimal value. In rats with anterior ME lesions, there was suppression of LH pulses with continuing FSH pulses in 12 of 21 rats. On the other hand, in animals with posterior to mid-ME lesions, 3 out of 21 rats had elimination of FSH pulses, whereas LH pulses were maintained. Fifteen of 42 operated rats had complete ME lesions, and pulses of both hormones were abolished. The remaining 12 rats had partial ME lesions that produced a partial block of the release of both hormones. The results support the concept of separate hypothalamic control of FSH and LH release with the axons of the putative FSH-releasing factor (FSHRF) neuronal system terminating primarily in the mid- to caudal ME, whereas those of the LHRH neuronal system terminate in the anterior and mid-median eminence. We hypothesize that pulses of FSH alone are mediated by release of the FSHRF into the hypophyseal portal vessels, whereas those of LH alone are mediated by LHRH. Pulses of both gonadotropins simultaneously may be mediated by pulses of both releasing hormones simultaneously. Alternatively, relatively large pulses of LHRH alone may account for simultaneous pulses of both gonadotropins since LHRH has intrinsic FSH-releasing activity.  相似文献   

6.
The preovulatory surge of gonadotropins is triggered by estradiol and enhanced to its full magnitude by progesterone. Progesterone may exert this effect through several mechanisms. One of the mechanisms is through the ability of progesterone to induce an increase in the hypothalamic content and release of LHRH. The purpose of this study was to determine if progesterone might not act through yet another mechanism and facilitate LHRH release of the proestrous gonadotropin surge through modulation of luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) degrading activity. Sixty-day-old Sprague-Dawley rats were ovariectomized; 14 days later, the estradiol-progesterone milieu of proestrous was mimicked in these animals through the use of estradiol containing silastic implants and subcutaneous progesterone injections. The LHRH degrading activity of the hypothalamus, pituitary and serum were monitored subsequently at preselected time points. In the hypothalamus, estradiol alone was capable of inducing significant increase in degrading activity; progesterone alone had no effect; however, progesterone subsequent to estradiol priming suppressed the increase induced by estradiol alone. In the pituitary, neither estradiol alone nor progesterone alone nor progesterone subsequent to estradiol priming had any significant effect on degrading activity. In the serum, estradiol induced a rapid and significant increase in activity; progesterone alone suppressed activity; progesterone subsequent to estradiol priming induced a similar but more rapid suppression. Therefore, the overall tendency was for estradiol to stimulate and progesterone to suppress LHRH degrading activity in the tissues studied. The results of this study indicate that progesterone has the capacity to suppress LHRH degrading activity and may be one of the mechanisms capable of increasing the availability of LHRH to the anterior pituitary gland thereby facilitating the preovulatory gonadotropin surges.  相似文献   

7.
This study examined the importance of pulsatile luteinizing hormone (LH) release on diestrus 1 (D1; metestrus) in the rat estrous cycle to ovarian follicular development and estradiol (E2) secretion. Single injections of a luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) antagonist given at -7.5 h prior to the onset of a 3-h blood sampling period on D1 reduced mean blood LH levels by decreasing LH pulse amplitude, while frequency was not altered. Sequential injections at -7.5 and -3.5 h completely eliminated pulsatile LH secretion. Neither treatment altered the total number of follicles/ovary greater than 150 mu in diameter, the number of follicles in any size group between 150 and 551 mu, or plasma E2, progesterone, or follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels. However, both treatments with LHRH antagonist significantly increased the percentage of atretic follicles in the ovary. These data indicate that: 1) pulsatile LH release is an important factor in determining the rate at which follicles undergo atresia on D1; 2) reductions in LH pulse amplitude alone are sufficient to increase the rate of follicular atresia on D1; 3) an absence of pulsatile LH release for a period of up to 10 h on D1 is not sufficient to produce a decline in ovarian E2 secretion, most likely because the atretic process was in its early stages and had not yet affected a sufficient number of E2-secreting granulosa cells to reduce the follicle's capacity to secrete E2; and 4) suppression or elimination of pulsatile LH release on D1 is not associated with diminished FSH secretion.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The effect of androgens on pituitary response to luteinizing-hormore-releasing hormone (LHRH) and their ability to modify effects of 17beta-estradiol (E2) on pituitary responsiveness to LHRH were tested in ovariectomized rats maintained on a daily dose of 0.25 microgram estradiol benzoate per rat for 6 d before androgen administration. Testosterone propionate (TP) (4, 40, 400, or 4000 microgram per rat), administered 24 h before LHRH (500 ng per rat), had no significant effect on luteinizing hormone (LH) or follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) response. Similar doses of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) did not significantly alter the LH response but significantly suppressed the FSH response. Even the lowest dose completely blocked the FSH response to LHRH. TP in combination with 4 or 400 microgram of E2 suppressed the stimulatory effect of E2 on both LH and FSH response to LHRH in a dose-related manner. DHT and E2 in combination affected LH response inconsistently, whereas their ratio determined FSH response; there was pronounced inhibition of FSH response in rats given high doses of DHT combined with low doses of E2; DHT inhibition of FSH response in animals receiving 4 microgram of DHT with 400 microgram E2 was partially overcome by the stimulatory effect of E2. Our results indicate that TP and DHT affect LH and FSH response to LHRH differently. The ratio of androgen to estrogen is important in determining the response to LHRH.  相似文献   

10.
Investigations were undertaken to study the effect of in vitro addition of testosterone (0.3 mM) on the release of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and prolactin (PRL) by pituitary-hypothalamus complex (PHC) or the whole pituitary (PI) incubated for 72 hr, with incubation media changed every 24 hr. PHC or PI were from adult intact or castrated (7 days post castration) rats. The tissues incubated with or without testosterone were further exposed to 0.1 nM luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) for 4 hr. Incubation media and the pituitary were analyzed for PRL and gonadotrophin content. While PHC from normal and castrated rats released increasing amounts of LH with diminishing amounts of FSH and PRL at different periods of incubation, PI showed a decrease in the amounts of gonadotrophin and PRL released. Co-incubation of PHC or PI of intact or castrated rats with testosterone stimulated the release of LH and FSH during the first or second-24 hr incubation but inhibited the release of PRL in all the three incubations of 24 hr each. The extent of PRL inhibition increased with increasing incubation period. Testosterone had no effect on LHRH induced release of PRL but inhibited LHRH induced release of LH and FSH by pituitaries from constructs of normal rats. Testosterone reduced intrapituitary contents of PRL and FSH of intact and castrated rats. The data are interpreted to suggest that hypothalamus is essential for the maintenance of functional pituitary in vitro and that intrinsic differences exist in mechanisms regulating the secretion of LH, FSH and PRL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
In the present experiment we examined the circadian neural luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) and serum luteinizing hormone (LH) response of prepubertal male and female rats under varying steroidal manipulations (Intact, Castrate, Castrate + estradiol 17 beta [E2] + oil and Castrate + E2 + progesterone[P]). Prepubertal males demonstrated greater and acyclic LHRH concentrations in both the medial basal hypothalamus (MBH) and preoptic-suprachiasmatic regions (POA-Sch) irrespective of steroid treatment. In steroid-treatment castrated male rats only the negative feedback action on serum LH levels were observed with maximal effect in animals injected with the combination E2 + P. In contrasts, prepuberal castrated females exhibited both inhibitory and stimulatory feedback actions on LH release following steroid treatment. Moreover, a distinctive, significant, progesterone-dependent increase in AM POA-Sch, but not MBH-LHRH concentrations was detected. These results demonstrate the existence of a functional sexual dimorphism in the positive feedback response of the POA-Sch-pituitary axis of prepubertal rats to progesterone treatment.  相似文献   

12.
Attempts were made to find out whether hyperprolactinemia has an effect on the hypothalamo-pituitary response to estrogen feedback and LHRH stimulation. Adult female rats of Wistar strain were ovariectomized and received subcutaneous injection of 20 micrograms estradiol benzoate (EB) 3-4 weeks later (day-0). A second injection of 20 micrograms EB, when administered at noon on day-3, induced a highly significant increase in serum LH (p less than 0.001 vs. basal values), but not FSH, estimated at 1800 h on the same day. This EB-promoted LH release was not altered by pretreatment with rat PRL (5 micrograms/day), which was administered subcutaneously daily in the morning (1100 h) between day-1 and day-3. No statistical difference in the serum LH concentration was found when compared with the values for the control animals pretreated with 0.9% saline alone. Serum gonadotropins 15 min after LHRH administration (100 ng/100 g BW) in 32-day-old female rats were not statistically different between the animals pretreated with 5 micrograms PRL, which was given subcutaneously daily (at 0800 h) for 3 days, and the controls pretreated with 0.9% saline. These results suggest that an acute increase in serum PRL may not exert a negative effect on the gonadotropin release induced by estrogen feedback and LHRH stimulation.  相似文献   

13.
Immature female rats were infused s.c. continuously over a 60-h period with a partially purified porcine pituitary follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) preparation having FSH activity 4.2 x NIH-FSH-S1 and luteinizing hormone (LH) activity 0.022 x NIH-LH-S1. High rates of superovulation were observed in rats receiving 1 U FSH/day, with 69 +/- 11 oocytes/rat recovered as cumulus-enclosed oocytes from oviducts on Day 1 (equivalent to the day of estrus). Addition of LH to the FSH, at dosages equivalent to 2.5-100 micrograms/day NIH-LH-S1 equivalents (2.5-100 mU) resulted in a dose-related inhibition of superovulation, reaching a nadir of 15 +/- 7 oocytes recovered from rats receiving 50 mU LH/day together with 1 U FSH/day. At the two highest LH doses, 50 and 100 mU/day, ovulation was advanced so that 12 +/- 3 and 15 +/- 4 oocytes, respectively, were recovered from oviducts of these rats flushed on the morning of Day 0, compared to none in rats infused with FSH alone. Ovarian steroid concentrations (ng/mg) observed on the morning of Day 0 in rats infused with FSH alone were progesterone, 0.50 +/- 0.13; testosterone, 0.16 +/- 0.08; androstenedione, 0.06; and estradiol, 0.23 +/- 0.05. On the morning of Day 1, ovarian progesterone concentrations in rats infused with FSH alone had risen to 3.30 +/- 0.33 ng/mg, whereas concentrations of testosterone, androstenedione, and estradiol, had fallen to essentially undetectable levels. Addition of LH to the FSH infusion resulted in dose-related increases, on Day 0, of all four steroids up to a dosage of 25 mU LH/day. At higher LH dosages, Day 0 ovarian concentrations of androgens and estradiol fell markedly, while progesterone concentrations continued to increase. Histological examination of ovaries revealed increases in the extent of luteinization of granulosa cells in follicles with retained oocytes on both Days 0 and 1 in rats infused with 25 and 50 mU LH/day together with 1 U FSH/day, compared to those observed in rats receiving FSH alone. These findings indicate that the elevated progesterone levels on Day 0 and inhibition of ovulation observed at these LH doses were due to premature luteinization of follicles, thus preventing ovulation. At lower LH doses, no sign (based on histologic or steroidogenic criteria) of premature luteinization was evident, suggesting that the decreased superovulation in these rats was due to decreased follicular maturation and/or increased atresia rather than to luteinization of follicles without ovulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Sex steroids and the control of LHRH secretion   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Gonadal steroids are important hormonal signals that regulate the activity of LHRH synthesizing and releasing neurons. Aside from a direct effect through the feedback mechanisms exerted at hypothalamic and/or anterior pituitary level, gonadal steroids may modify the rhythmic LHRH release by modulating other systems affecting LHRH neurons. 1. In ovariectomized E2-treated female rats, progesterone is able to evoke LHRH release from the perifused hypothalamus without affecting LH and FSH release. 2. Excitatory amino acids (EAA) and their related analogs (NMDA and kainate) are known to stimulate LH release in young rats. When tested in a perifusion system on hypothalamic and anterior pituitary tissues, they differentially stimulate the release of LHRH (NMDA) and of LH (KA); their effect on both structures is markedly reduced following orchidectomy. It appears that gonadal steroids might exert a facilitatory action on the neurosecretory activity of LHRH neurons as well as a modulatory influence on the effect of EAA.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of RU 486 on the modulation of LH release by progesterone were investigated in cultured anterior pituitary cells from ovariectomized adult female rats. The inhibitory effect of progesterone on LH secretion was demonstrable in estrogen-treated pituitary cells, in which addition of 10(-6) M progesterone to cells cultured in the presence of 10(-9) M estradiol for 52 h reduced the LH response to GnRH (10(-11) to 10(-7) M). When RU 486 was superimposed upon such combined treatment with estradiol and progesterone, the suppressive effect of progesterone on GnRH-induced LH release was completely abolished. The converse (facilitatory) effect of progesterone on LH secretion was observed in pituitary cells pretreated with 10(-9) M estradiol for 48 h and then with 10(-6) M progesterone for 4 h. When RU 486 was added together with progesterone during the 4 h treatment period, the facilitatory effect of progesterone was blocked and LH release fell to below the corresponding control value. The direct effect of RU 486 on LH secretion in the absence of exogenous progesterone was evaluated in cells cultured in the absence or presence of 10(-9) M estradiol and then treated for 4 to 24 h with increasing concentrations of RU 486 (10(-12) to 10(-5) M) and stimulated with GnRH (10(-9) M) during the last 3 h of incubation. In estrogen-deficient cultures, 4 h exposure to RU 486 concentrations of 10(-6) M and above decreased the LH response to GnRH by up to 50%. In cultures pretreated with 10(-9) M estradiol, GnRH-stimulated LH responses was inhibited by much lower RU 486 concentrations, of 10(-9) M and above. After 24 h of incubation the effects of RU 486 were similar in control and estradiol-pretreated pituitary cell cultures. Thus, RU 486 alone has a significant inhibitory effect on LH secretion that is enhanced in the presence of estrogen. The antiprogestin is also a potent antagonist of both the inhibitory and the facilitatory actions of progesterone upon pituitary gonadotropin release in vitro.  相似文献   

16.
This career retrospective describes how the initial work on the mechanism of hormone action provided the tools for the study of hirsutism, virilism, and polycystic ovarian disease. After excessive ovarian and or adrenal androgen secretion in polycystic ovarian disease had been established, the question whether the disease was genetic or acquired, methods to manage hirsutism and methods for the induction of ovulation were addressed. Recognizing that steroid gonadotropin feedback was an important regulatory factor, initial studies were done on the secretion of LH and FSH in the ovulatory cycle. This was followed by the study of basic mechanisms of steroid-gonadotropin feedback system, using castration and steroid replacement and the events surrounding the natural onset of puberty. Studies in ovariectomized rats showed that progesterone was a pivotal enhancer of estrogen-induced gonadotropin release, thus accounting for the preovulatory gonadotropin surge. The effects of progesterone were manifested by depletion of the occupied estrogen receptors of the anterior pituitary, release of hypothalamic LHRH, and inhibition of enzymes that degrade LHRH. Progesterone also promoted the synthesis of FSH in the pituitary. The 3α,5α-reduced metabolite of progesterone brought about selective LH release and acted using the GABA(A) receptor system. The 5α-reduced metabolite of progesterone brought about selective FSH release; the ability of progesterone to bring about FSH release was dependent on its 5α-reduction. The GnRH neuron does not have steroid receptors; the steroid effect was shown to be mediated through the excitatory amino acid glutamate, which in turn stimulated nitric oxide. These observations led to the replacement of the long-accepted belief that ovarian steroids acted directly on the GnRH neuron by the novel concept that the steroid feedback effect was exerted at the glutamatergic neuron, which in turn regulated the GnRH neuron. The neuroprotective effects of estrogens on brain neurons are of considerable interest.  相似文献   

17.
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether progesterone exerted progesterone receptor mediated direct effects on the anterior pituitary in the secretion of FSH and whether such effects were mediated through the 5 alpha-reduction of progesterone. Treatment of anterior pituitary dispersed cells for 48 h with 0.5 nM estradiol reduced the ED50 for gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH)-stimulated FSH release from 0.58 to 0.36 ng/ml and the ED50 for GnRH-induced LH release from 0.54 to 0.19 ng/ml. When dispersed pituitary cells were treated with 0.5 nM estradiol and exposed to various doses of progesterone for 1 to 6 h, the most consistent rise in basal and GnRH-stimulated FSH release was observed with the 50 nM dose of progesterone with a 3-h exposure period. All three doses of progesterone elevated basal LH and GnRH-stimulated LH was increased by the 50 and 100 nM doses of progesterone during the 3-h period of treatment. Using the 50 nM dose of progesterone, basal and GnRH-stimulated LH was increased after 2, 3 and 6 h of progesterone treatment. When the period of exposure of progesterone was extended to 12, 36 or 48 h, there was a significant inhibition of GnRH-stimulated FSH release. GnRH-stimulated LH release was inhibited at 36 and 48 but not 12 h after progesterone treatment. These studies showed that the effect of progesterone administered for periods of 1 to 6 h enhanced the secretion of LH and FSH whereas progesterone administered for periods beyond 12 h inhibited FSH and LH release by dispersed pituitary cells in culture. These results are similar to those observed in vivo after progesterone treatment. Furthermore estrogen priming of the dispersed pituitary cells was necessary to observe the effects of progesterone. The progesterone antagonist RU486 prevented the progesterone-induced rise in GnRH-stimulated FSH release. Furthermore the 5 alpha-reductase inhibitor N,N-diethyl-4-methyl-3-oxo-4-aza-5 alpha-androstane- 17 beta-carboxamide also prevented the progesterone-induced rise in GnRH-stimulated FSH release in estrogen-treated dispersed pituitary cells. These results indicate that the anterior pituitary is a major site of action of progesterone in the release of FSH and that 5 alpha-reduction of progesterone plays an important role in FSH release.  相似文献   

18.
This study used pituitary cells in culture firstly to test the hypothesis that NPY may augment the pituitary LH response to LHRH and secondly to determine whether this interaction is dependent on the presence of estradiol. LHRH (10(-10)-10(-6) M) caused a significant increase in LH secretion from dispersed ovine pituitary cells maintained in culture for six days, a response which was enhanced when cells were pretreated for three days with 4 x 10(-11) M estradiol. NPY 10(-10)-10(-6) M) had no effect on basal LH release from ovine pituitary cells maintained either in the presence or absence of estradiol. NPY (10(-10) and 10(-8) M) also had no effect on LHRH-stimulated LH release either in the presence or absence of estradiol. These results substantiate previous observations that physiologically relevant concentrations of estradiol enhance the LH response to LHRH in cultured ovine pituitary cells. However, in contrast to experiments carried out using rat pituitary cells in culture, the present data provide no evidence to support the hypothesis that NPY alone interacts with LHRH in the control of LH secretion from the ovine pituitary gland.  相似文献   

19.
Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) enhances the conversion of testosterone or androstenedione into estradiol by stimulating the aromatase enzyme system. Estradiol also enhances FSH action. Thus, a synergistic action of FSH and estradiol may be required for maturation of ovarian follicles. We hypothesized that estradiol may be required for FSH action. Thus, blocking estrogen synthesis should prevent FSH-induced increases in FSH receptors. Hypophysectomized rats were divided into five groups and injected subcutaneously with: 1) saline, 2) cyanoketone (0.05 mg, blocks the conversion of pregnenolone to progesterone), 3) ovine FSH (oFSH, 200 micrograms), 4) cyanoketone then oFSH 24 h later, or 5) cyanoketone plus estradiol [or progesterone, testosterone, promegestrone (R5020), dihydrotestosterone (DHT), 2 mg], then FSH 24 h later. Animals were decapitated at 0, 12 or 24 h after an injection of oFSH, and membrane receptors for FSH and luteinizing hormone (LH), plus nuclear receptors for estradiol from granulosa cells, were measured. LH receptor levels were increased only after administration of FSH and estradiol. At 0 and 24 h, numbers of FSH or estradiol receptors were similar in saline- and cyanoketone-treated animals. FSH alone increased (P less than 0.01) FSH and estradiol receptors 3-fold and 4-fold, respectively, over controls by 12 and 24 h. Cyanoketone prevented these increases in FSH and estradiol receptors. Estradiol replacement fully reversed the effects of cyanoketone on FSH action. Replacement with progesterone and testosterone was able to only partially restore levels of FSH receptors; however, estradiol receptor numbers were also increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Porcine follicular fluid (pff), treated with charcoal to remove steroids, was used to determine whether inhibin is active in the laboratory rabbit. When pff (5 ml/4 kg body weight) was injected (ip) into does that had been castrated 2 weeks earlier, there was a significant decline in blood follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels; the decline lasted for 8-12 h. Blood levels of luteinizing hormone (LH) were suppressed, but only briefly at 3 h after injection. In other experiments, intact does which had been injected with pff 9 h and 10 min before receiving a single, i.v. injection of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) (10 micrograms/kg body weight) showed a sharp reduction in the concentration of LH in the blood samples collected 15, 30 and 60 min after LHRH administration. Secretion of FSH responded poorly to LHRH stimulation, and pff had little suppressive action on blood levels. Having established that the pff preparation had inhibin activity, its action on the postovulatory surge of FSH secretion was next examined. This release of FSH, which occurs 6 to 36 h after ovulation, has been hypothesized to be required for the establishment of pregnancy by stimulating the growth of the ovarian follicles supplying the luteotropic estradiol. To test this hypothesis, pff was injected into rabbits every 8 h for the first 5 days of pregnancy and found to block the postovulatory FSH surge. The patterns of secretion of LH and progesterone in the same pff-injected animals were, however, not altered from normal pregnancy patterns by pff.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号