Abstract: | Mast cells occur in the brain and their number changes with reproductive status. While it has been suggested that brain mast cells contain the mammalian hypothalamic form of gonadotropin‐releasing hormone (GnRH‐I), it is not known whether mast cells synthesize GnRH‐I de novo. In the present study, mast cells in the rat thalamus were immunoreactive to antisera generated against GnRH‐I and the GnRH‐I associated peptide (GAP); mast cell identity was confirmed by the presence of heparin, a molecule specific to mast cells, or serotonin. To test whether mast cells synthesize GnRH‐I mRNA, in situ hybridization was performed using a GnRH‐I cRNA probe, and the signal was identified as being within mast cells by the binding of avidin to heparin. GnRH‐I mRNA was also found, using RT‐PCR, in mast cells isolated from the peritoneal cavity. Given the function of GnRH‐I in the regulation of reproduction, changes in the population of brain GnRH‐I mast cells were investigated. While housing males with sexually receptive females for 2 h or 5 days resulted in a significant increase in the number of brain mast cells, the proportion of mast cells positive for GnRH‐I was similar to that in males housed with a familiar male. These findings represent the first report showing that mast cells synthesize GnRH‐I and that the mast cell increase seen in a reproductive context is the result of a parallel increase in GnRH‐I positive and non‐GnRH‐I positive mast cells. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 56: 113–124, 2003 |