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1.
The timed secretion of the luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) from pituitary gonadotrophs during the estrous cycle is crucial for normal reproductive functioning. The release of LH and FSH is stimulated by gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) secreted by hypothalamic GnRH neurons. It is controlled by the frequency of the GnRH signal that varies during the estrous cycle. Curiously, the secretion of LH and FSH is differentially regulated by the frequency of GnRH pulses. LH secretion increases as the frequency increases within a physiological range, and FSH secretion shows a biphasic response, with a peak at a lower frequency. There is considerable experimental evidence that one key factor in these differential responses is the autocrine/paracrine actions of the pituitary polypeptides activin and follistatin. Based on these data, we develop a mathematical model that incorporates the dynamics of these polypeptides. We show that a model that incorporates the actions of activin and follistatin is sufficient to generate the differential responses of LH and FSH secretion to changes in the frequency of GnRH pulses. In addition, it shows that the actions of these polypeptides, along with the ovarian polypeptide inhibin and the estrogen-mediated variations in the frequency of GnRH pulses, are sufficient to account for the time courses of LH and FSH plasma levels during the rat estrous cycle. That is, a single peak of LH on the afternoon of proestrus and a double peak of FSH on proestrus and early estrus. We also use the model to identify which regulation pathways are indispensable for the differential regulation of LH and FSH and their time courses during the estrous cycle. We conclude that the actions of activin, inhibin, and follistatin are consistent with LH/FSH secretion patterns, and likely complement other factors in the production of the characteristic secretion patterns in female rats.  相似文献   

2.
Price CA 《Theriogenology》1994,41(2):471-482
The hypothesis that testosterone and inhibin interact in the control of FSH secretion in rams was tested. Adult rams were castrated and were simultaneously given testosterone implants and 3-times daily sc injections of 0, 0.4, 0.8 or 1.6 ml charcoal-treated bovine follicular fluid (bFF). After 1 wk, the implants were removed, and the bFF injections continued as before. Blood samples were taken daily for mean LH, FSH and testosterone concentrations, and every 10 min for 12 h in the presence and in the absence of testosterone for assessment of pulsatile LH release. The bFF specifically inhibited FSH secretion from rat pituitary cells in culture. In the presence of testosterone, there were no main effects of bFF on mean plasma FSH or LH concentrations, nor were these values different from their pre-treatment means (P>0.05). Treatment with bFF did not affect LH pulse frequency or amplitude, but the number of rams showing LH pulses was reduced in the 0.8 and 1.6-ml dose groups (P<0.05). Removal of testosterone increased (P<0.05) both gonadotropins. In the absence of testosterone, no main effect of bFF on mean LH or FSH concentrations was observed, although the 1.6-ml dose suppressed the postcastration rise of both LH and FSH. These data suggest that inhibin does not interact with testosterone and that a physiological level of testosterone is sufficient for the regulation of FSH secretion in adult rams.  相似文献   

3.
The secretion of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) by pituitary cells is stimulated by activin and gonadotropin-releasing hormone, GnRH. To examine the possible interrelationships between the intracellular actions of these secretagogues, responsiveness to activin was tested following pretreatment with 0, 0.1, or 10 nM GnRH. In cells pretreated with 0 or 0.1 nM GnRH, FSH secretion was increased approximately 2-fold during a subsequent challenge with either activin or GnRH. In contrast, in cells pretreated with 10 nM GnRH, FSH secretion became unresponsive to GnRH but could still be stimulated 2-fold by activin. These results demonstrate that activin is able to stimulate FSH secretion in cells that have undergone desensitization to GnRH.  相似文献   

4.
Immunological study of ovarian inhibin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Antisera to purified porcine follicular fluid inhibin of 32 K protein (pFF 32 K inhibin) were raised in rabbits. Increasing doses of an antiserum with high titer could neutralize the maximal suppression of FSH secretion caused by 10 ng of pFF 32 K inhibin from rat anterior pituitary cells in culture. A radioimmunoassay was developed using the antiserum and 125I-labelled pFF 32 K inhibin. Specificity of the antiserum was examined by comparing immunological and biological potencies of various inhibin preparations. Cross-reactivity tests revealed that the antiserum almost recognizes rat ovarian inhibin preparations. The antiserum also recognizes purified bovine follicular fluid inhibin of 32 K protein (bFF 32 K inhibin), but with a cross-reactivity of approximately 20%. Cross-reactivity of human follicular fluid to the antiserum was less than 10%. The antiserum also recognizes inhibin forms of higher molecular weights, 100 K, 80 K, and 55 K proteins, which have previously been identified by gel filtration or SDS-PAGE of crude pFF inhibin preparations under protein-dissociation conditions, indicating that these inhibin forms have common or closely related immunodetermining sites.  相似文献   

5.
6.
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   

7.
The actions of two inhibin preparations and cycloheximide on gonadotropin release were investigated in superfused pituitary cell cultures. Pituitary cells isolated from 18-day-old male rats were grown in Matrigel-coated superfusion chambers in chemically defined medium. After stationary culture for 4 days, the cell monolayers were superfused at a constant speed (0.25 ml/min) and were intermittently stimulated (6 min/h) with 10 nM gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). Groups of cultures were exposed to the test substances for varying time periods during stationary culture and/or during superfusion. Inhibitory effects of both inhibin preparations on the secretion of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) in response to GnRH pulses were observed after 2 h of exposure and became maximal after about 6 h. Basal secretion of FSH between GnRH pulses was also suppressed, whereas the basal interpulse secretion of LH was not changed. When exposure to inhibin was discontinued, the secretion of both FSH and LH progressively increased and returned to control values by approximately 6 h. Cycloheximide (500 ng/ml) affected gonadotropin release with dynamics similar to those observed for the inhibin preparation. These data support the hypothesis that inhibition of gonadotropin synthesis may be an important step in the molecular mechanism of action by which inhibin regulates gonadotropin release.  相似文献   

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

9.
The relationship between follicle growth and plasma inhibin A, FSH, LH, estradiol (E), and progesterone was investigated during the normal bovine estrous cycle and after treatment with steroid-free bovine follicular fluid (bFF) to arrest follicle development. In the first study, four heifers were monitored over three prostaglandin (PG)-synchronized cycles. Blood was collected every 2-8 h, and ovaries were examined daily by ultrasonography. Inhibin A was measured using a modified enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay that employed a new monoclonal antibody against the alpha subunit of bovine inhibin. Plasma inhibin A ( approximately 50 pg/ml before luteolysis) rose steadily during the induced follicular phase (P < 0.05) to a peak ( approximately 125 pg/ml) coincident with the preovulatory E/LH/FSH surge. After ovulation, inhibin A fell sharply (P < 0.05) to a nadir ( approximately 55 pg/ml) coincident with the secondary FSH rise. During the next 3 days, inhibin A increased to approximately 90 pg/ml in association with growth of the new dominant follicle (DF). Plasma E also rose twofold during this period, whereas FSH fell by approximately 50%. Inhibin A was negatively correlated with FSH (r = -0.37, P < 0.001) and positively correlated with E (r = 0.49, P < 0.0001). Observations on eight cycles (two cycles/heifer), in which growth of the ovulatory DF was monitored from emergence to ovulation, showed that the first-wave DF (DF1) ovulated in three cycles and the second-wave DF (DF2) in five cycles. After PG, plasma inhibin A and E increased similarly in both groups, with concomitant falls in FSH. In the former group, the restricted ability of DF1 to secrete both inhibin A and E was restored after luteolysis. Results indicate that dynamic changes in the secretion of both E and inhibin A from the DF contribute to the fall in FSH during the follicular phase and to the generation and termination of the secondary FSH surge, both of which play a key role in follicle selection. In the second study, bFF (two dose levels) was administered to heifers (n = 3-4) for 60 h starting from the time of DF1 emergence. Both doses suppressed FSH (P < 0.05) and blocked DF1 growth to the same extent (P < 0.01), although inhibin A levels were only marginally raised by the lower dose (not significant compared to controls). The high bFF dose raised (P < 0.001) inhibin A to supraphysiological levels ( approximately 1 ng/ml). A large "rebound" rise in FSH occurred within 1 day of stopping both treatments, even though the inhibin A level in the high-dose bFF group was still approximately threefold higher than that in controls. This indicates that desensitization of gonadotropes to inhibin negative feedback is a contributory factor, together with reduced ovarian output of E, in generation of the post-bFF rebound in FSH.  相似文献   

10.
The objective was to determine the effect of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH), GnRH analogue (GnRH-A) or oestradiol administration on luteinising hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) release in GnRH-immunised anoestrous and control cyclic heifers. Thirty-two heifers (477 ± 7.1 kg) were immunised against either human serum albumin (HSA; controls; n = 8), or a HSAGnRH conjugate. On day 70 after primary immunisation, control heifers (n = 4 per treatment; day 3 of cycle) received either (a) 2.5 μg GnRH or (b) 2.5 μg of GnRH-A (Buserelin®) and GnRH-immunised heifers (blocked by GnRH antibody titre; n = 6 per treatment) received either (c) saline, (d) 2.5 μg GnRH, (e) 25 μg GnRH or (f) 2.5 μg GnRH-A, intravenously. On day 105, 1 mg oestradiol was injected (intramuscularly) into control (n = 6) and GnRH-immunised anoestrous heifers with either low (13.4 ± 1.9% binding at 1:640; n = 6) or high GnRH antibody titres (33.4 ± 4.8% binding; n = 6). Data were analysed by ANOVA. Mean plasma LH and FSH concentrations on day 69 were higher (P < 0.05) in control than in GnRH-immunised heifers (3.1 ± 0.16 vs. 2.5 ± 0.12 ng LH ml−1 and 22.5 ± 0.73 vs. 17.1 ± 0.64 ng FSH ml−1, respectively). The number of LH pulses was higher (P < 0.05) in control than in GnRH-immunised heifers on day 69 (3.4 ± 0.45 and 1.0 ± 0.26 pulses per 6 h, respectively). On day 70, 2.5 μg GnRH increased (P < 0.05) LH concentrations in control but not in GnRH-immunised heifers, while both 25 μg GnRH and 2.5 μg GnRH-A increased (P < 0.05) LH concentrations in GnRH-immunised heifers, and 2.5 μg GnRH-A increased LH in controls. FSH was increased (P < 0.05) in GnRH-immunised heifers following 25 μg GnRH and 2.5 μg GnRH-A. Oestradiol challenge increased (P < 0.05) LH concentrations during the 13–24 h period after challenge with a greater (P < 0.05) increase in control than in GnRH-immunised heifers. FSH concentrations were decreased (P < 0.05) for at least 30 h after oestradiol challenge. In conclusion, GnRH immunisation decreased LH pulsatility and mean LH and FSH concentrations. GnRH antibodies neutralised low doses of GnRH (2.5 μg), but not high doses of GnRH (25 μg) and GnRH-A (2.5 μg). GnRH immunisation decreased the rise in LH concentrations following oestradiol challenge.  相似文献   

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

13.
Roles of activin/bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) system in the pathogenesis of human pituitary adenoma remain unknown although these factors stimulate follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion in the normal pituitary. Here we demonstrated that type-I and -II subunit mRNAs of activin/BMP receptors are expressed in Pit-1-negative FSH-producing (FSH-oma) and nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas (NF-oma). Basal levels of serum FSH standardized by luteinizing hormone (LH) were markedly high in FSH-omas in contrast to NF-omas. However, gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-induced increment of FSH standardized by that of LH was not changed in FSH-omas, suggesting that imbalanced FSH secretion by FSH-oma is not attributable to GnRH regardless of the expression of GnRH receptor. Although activin betaA subunit was detected in neither adenoma, the betaB subunit was expressed highly in FSH-omas and, to lesser extent, in NF-omas. As for BMPs, BMP-6 and -7 were detected in NF-omas while BMP-4 and -15 were not detected in either type of adenoma. In the presence of pituitary activin/BMP system, the levels of co-expressing follistatin mRNA in the tumors were reduced in FSH-oma compared with NF-oma, suggesting that endogenous follistatin is involved in FSH overproduction through inhibition of activin/BMP system independently of GnRH.  相似文献   

14.
This minireview considers the state of knowledge regarding the interactions of testicular hormones to regulate the secretion and actions of GnRH in males, with special focus on research conducted in rams and male rhesus monkeys. In these two species, LH secretion is under the negative feedback regulation of testicular steroids that act predominantly within the central nervous system to suppress GnRH secretion. The extent to which these actions of testicular steroids result from the direct actions of testosterone or its primary metabolites, estradiol or dihydrotestosterone, is unclear. Because GnRH neurons do not contain steroid receptors, the testicular steroids must influence GnRH neurons via afferent neurons, which are largely undefined. The feedback regulation of FSH is controlled by inhibin acting directly at the pituitary gland. In male rhesus monkeys, the feedback regulation of FSH secretion is accounted for totally by the physiologically relevant form of inhibin, which appears to be inhibin B. In rams, the feedback regulation of FSH secretion involves the actions of inhibin and testosterone and interactions between these hormones, but the physiologically relevant form of inhibin has not been determined. The mechanisms of action for inhibin are not known.  相似文献   

15.
Recent reports suggest that activin (the dimer of inhibin beta subunits with FSH-releasing activity) has specific receptors on ovarian granulosa cells. The present study examined the effects of purified porcine activin on inhibin secretion and mRNA levels in granulosa cells obtained from immature, estrogen-treated rats. Cells were cultured for 48 h in culture media, or media containing FSH (10 ng/ml) and/or activin (30 ng/ml). Western blot analyses performed with affinity-purified antisera to inhibin alpha- and beta A-subunits revealed that treatment with either FSH or activin increased the secretion of inhibin alpha beta dimer (Mr 30,000), with a further increase after cotreatment. These results were confirmed by an inhibin alpha-subunit RIA, which revealed 7-, 14-, and 71-fold increases in the secretion of immunoreactive inhibin-alpha by activin, FSH, and activin plus FSH, respectively. TGF beta, a structural homolog of activin, also stimulated inhibin release, whereas follistatin was ineffective. Total RNA from cultured cells was hybridized with 32P-labeled inhibin alpha-subunit cRNA or beta-actin cDNA probes, and inhibin-alpha message levels were normalized with beta-actin mRNA levels. Northern blot analysis revealed that treatment with FSH and activin increased hybridization of a 1.5 kilobase (kb) message, corresponding to the inhibin alpha-subunit mRNA. Slot blot analyses indicated a 6- and 8-fold stimulation of inhibin alpha-subunit mRNA levels by FSH and activin, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The aim of the current experiment was to study the regulation of follicle development in the pig using a potent GnRH agonist (GnRH-A) to initially suppress follicle development. Large-White hybrid gilts (n = 8) were treated during the luteal phase with GnRH-A. Four of these GnRH-A treated gilts and four control gilts were given a GnRH bolus on days 14 and 28 after GnRH-A administration or during the luteal phase in control gilts. Blood samples were collected for 10 h for FSH and LH, after which 1500 IU PMSG were administered and the ovaries and uteri recovered 72 h later. A further four GnRH-A treated gilts and four control gilts were slaughtered either 28 days after GnRH-A administration or during the luteal phase respectively, and all follicles > or = 1 mm diameter were dissected. The mean basal plasma FSH level was lower (P < 0.01) in GnRH-A treated than control gilts and showed no response to the GnRH challenge although levels increased (P < 0.01) in control gilts. The mean basal plasma LH levels were similar (P > 0.1) in GnRH-A treated and control gilts. Whilst in GnRH-A treated gilts plasma LH levels showed no response to the GnRH challenge, plasma LH levels were increased (P < 0.01) in control gilts. Pulsatile LH secretion was abolished in GnRH-A treated but not in control gilts. Plasma oestradiol levels were lower (P < 0.001) in GnRH-A treated gilts than in control gilts, but nevertheless both GnRH-A treated and control gilts responded to PMSG with increased plasma oestradiol levels. Treatment with GnRH-A reduced both the mean (2.1 vs. 2.7 mm; P < 0.01) and the maximal follicle diameter (4 vs. 6 mm) and reduced (P < 0.01) the total number of follicles > or = 2 mm diameter compared with control gilts. Administration of PMSG increased both mean follicle diameter (5.1 vs. 4.4 mm; P < 0.01) and maximal follicle diameter (7 vs. 9 mm) and caused a reduction (P < 0.001) in the total number of follicles > or = 2 mm diameter in both GnRH-A treated and control gilts. In summary, this study has demonstrated, for the first time in the pig, that the inhibition of follicle development as a result of pituitary down regulation/desensitisation can be reversed by exogenous gonadotrophin treatment. This model will be a powerful tool with which to investigate the precise regulation of follicle development in the pig.  相似文献   

17.
Both testosterone (T) and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-antagonist (GnRH-A) when given alone lower serum luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in intact and castrated rats. However, when graded doses of testosterone enanthate (T.E.) were given to GnRH-A-treated intact male rats, a paradoxical dose-dependent increase in serum FSH occurred; whereas serum LH remained suppressed. This surprising finding led us to ask whether the paradoxical increase in serum FSH in GnRH-A-suppressed animals was a direct stimulatory effect of T on the hypothalamic-pituitary axis or the result of a T effect on a testicular regulator of FSH. To test these hypotheses, we treated adult male castrated rats with GnRH-A and graded doses of T.E. In both intact and castrated rats, serum LH remained undetectable in GnRH-A-treated rats with or without T.E. However, addition of T.E. to GnRH-A led to a dose-dependent increase in serum FSH in castrated animals as well, thus pointing against mediation by a selective testicular regulator of FSH. These data provide evidence that pituitary LH and FSH responses may be differentially regulated under certain conditions. When the action of GnRH is blocked (such as in GnRH-A-treated animals), T directly and selectively increases pituitary FSH secretion.  相似文献   

18.
In several physiological paradigms, secretion of FSH and LH are not coordinately regulated. Because these hormones appear to be produced by a single cell type in the anterior pituitary gland, their discordant regulation must be related to differential intracellular responses to various stimuli. Estradiol-17beta (estradiol) has been shown to influence secretion of both FSH and LH and some of its effects are mediated directly on the gonadotrope. Changes in expression of intrapituitary factors such as activin and follistatin may mediate effects of estradiol and account for discordant patterns of FSH and LH. The aims of this study were 1) to determine if estradiol alters expression of genes encoding activin, follistatin, or both in ovine pituitary cells; and 2) to observe the effects of immunoneutralizing activin B in vitro on gonadotropin secretion. Pituitary cells from five ewes in the anestrous season were cultured for 24 h with estradiol (0.01 or 1.0 nM). Estradiol reduced basal secretion of FSH in a dose-dependent manner (P: < 0.001) and simultaneously increased basal secretion of LH (P: < 0.001). Decreased secretion of FSH in estradiol-treated cultures was accompanied by suppressed levels of FSHbeta subunit mRNA (P: < 0.001). Amounts of mRNA for activin beta(B) were reduced in a dose-dependent manner by estradiol (27% +/- 4.9% at 0.01 nM, P: < 0.02; and 46% +/- 3.9% at 1.0 nM, P: < 0.002). In contrast, mRNA for follistatin was not affected by treatment with estradiol. Treatment of pituitary cells with an antibody to activin B reduced secretion of FSH by 50% (P: < 0.01) without influencing secretion of LH. These data lead us to conclude that discordant secretion of gonadotropins can be induced by estradiol acting directly at the pituitary level. The inhibitory effect of estradiol on FSH secretion may be mediated indirectly through decreased pituitary expression of the activin gene.  相似文献   

19.
M E Rush 《Life sciences》1986,38(21):1941-1949
The purpose of this study is to determine the acute response of pituitary FSH and LH release to unilateral gonadectomy in the MSG-treated rat, and to determine whether pFF (inhibin) can act effectively on pituitary FSH secretion in the MSG-lesioned rat. MSG (4 mg/kg B.W.) or saline was injected subcutaneously on postnatal days 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 to male and female littermates which were used in the experiments after postnatal day 60. In the first experiment male and female littermates were bilaterally gonadectomized and bled serially for the next 72 h. At 0 h plasma FSH concentrations in MSG-treated rats were lower (p less than 0.05) than those in saline-treated controls, and for the 72 h immediately following bilateral gonadectomy FSH levels increased parallel to those of the controls, but after a significant delay. In the second experiment, MSG-treated male and female littermates were injected with 0.5 ml of pFF at several intervals following bilateral gonadectomy and decapitated 6 hours later. Injection of pFF significantly suppressed circulating FSH titers in all groups without affecting LH levels. In a third experiment, rats were unilaterally gonadectomized and blood samples were obtained at various intervals for 48 h. Following unilateral gonadectomy there was a significant transient increase in FSH levels in male or female MSG-treated rats as compared to their 0 h values; however, the absolute levels attained were barely equal to the basal concentrations observed in the saline-treated control rats. The conclusions from these data are: insufficient FSH secretion in response to unilateral gonadectomy may be responsible for the lack of compensatory gonadal hypertrophy in MSG-lesioned rats, pituitary response to inhibin is apparently unaltered by MSG toxicity, and the MSG-lesioned rat is a useful model to study the differential control mechanisms of FSH and LH secretion.  相似文献   

20.
Circulating inhibin A, inhibin B, activin A, total immunoreactive inhibin alpha-subunit (ir-alpha inhibin), LH, FSH and progesterone concentrations were measured throughout the normal ovulatory cycle and after cessation of egg laying induced by feed restriction to investigate the potential involvement of inhibins and activins in the ovulatory cycle of the domestic hen. Plasma inhibin A varied significantly (P < 0.05) during the ovulatory cycle; the concentration was highest at the preovulatory LH surge and reached a nadir 10 h later, at about the time the F(2) follicle makes the transition to become the new F(1) follicle. Plasma FSH concentrations did not change significantly throughout the cycle and showed no correlation with inhibin A. Total ir-alpha inhibin concentrations were much higher than those of inhibin A at all stages of the ovulatory cycle and showed no correlation with inhibin A or FSH. Plasma concentrations of inhibin B and of activin A were below the detection limit of the assays in all plasma samples analysed. In the feed restriction study, plasma inhibin A and total ir-alpha inhibin showed little change until the last day of oviposition (day 0) after which they fell significantly (P < 0.05) and remained low to the end of the experiment (approximately 70-78% decrease relative to day -4). Conversely, plasma FSH increased after cessation of laying and was significantly higher (P < 0.05) from day 3 to the end of the study (approximately 50% increase on day 6 relative to day -4). Plasma FSH values were negatively correlated with inhibin A (r = -0.39; P < 0.005) and total ir-alpha inhibin (r = -0.36; P < 0.005). Plasma LH and progesterone also decreased (P < 0.05) during feed restriction. The decrease in LH preceded the terminal oviposition and the associated fall in inhibin A by 2 days; there was a positive correlation between LH and inhibin A (r = 0.35; P < 0.005). Taken together these findings support (i) a role for LH in promoting inhibin A secretion by preovulatory follicles and (ii) an endocrine role for inhibin A secreted by preovulatory follicles in the maintenance of tonic FSH secretion in laying hens.  相似文献   

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