Abstract: | The pituitaries of adult and fetal crab-eating macaques (Macaca fascicularis) have been studied by immunofluorescence using 15 antibodies against most of the known hormones in the adenohypophysis. The antibodies used were first checked on adult pituitaries for their cross-specificity with macaque pituitary hormones. We found five types of endocrine cells reacting positively, according to the biochemical relation of the molecules evidenced with one or more of the antibodies used. The sequential appearance of the various hormones in the cells of the anterior and intermediate lobes was then determined. The first hormones evidenced at day 45 of pregnancy were ACTH, beta-MSH, beta- and gamma-LPH and alpha- and beta-endorphins. alpha-MSH appeared at day 48 and STH at day 51. The glycoprotein hormones, LH, FSH and TSH, appeared at day 57 but the thyrotropes and gonadotropes did not attain their adult characteristics (staining intensity, morphology, density and distribution in the pituitary) until days 71 and 93, respectively. Prolactin was only found beginning at day 93 of pregnancy. The different specificity tests applied to the pituitary of the macaque, as well as to that of other vertebrates, show that the antibodies used have good specificity. A comparison of the dates at which the fetal pituitary gonadotropes appear in the macaque and the results of a developmental study of the external genital organs in that species indicated that the pituitary gonadotropic function is only established after somatic sex differentiation, which would thus probably occur independently. |