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Prolactin does not mediate the suppressive effect of the suckling stimulus on luteinizing hormone secretion in ovariectomized lactating rats
Authors:K Maeda  E Uchida  H Tsukamura  N Ohkura  S Ohkura  A Yokoyama
Affiliation:School of Agriculture, Nagoya University, Japan.
Abstract:The plasma LH concentration in ovariectomized lactating rats is low for 14 days postpartum, while the prolactin concentration is high during this period. We examined the effect of the inhibition of increased prolactin secretion with bromocriptine (CB-154) on the LH secretion in lactating rats ovariectomized on day 2 (day 0 = day of parturition). Blood samples were collected through an indwelling atrial cannula every day. LH levels were kept low until day 9 in lactating rats injected daily with CB-154 (0.6 mg/day, s.c.). The duration of the period during which LH secretion was suppressed was shorter in lactating rats treated with CB-154 than in saline-injected controls. The replacement with ovine prolactin by means of a mini-osmotic pump (0.3 mg/day, s.c.) in CB-154-treated lactating rats restored the duration of LH suppression. In rats deprived of their pups on day 2, the LH concentration rose immediately after removal of the pups and the LH level was not significantly different between rats treated with CB-154, ovine prolactin and saline, indicating that neither the CB-154 treatment nor the high level of prolactin alone has any effect on LH secretion in rats deprived of their pups. The present results clearly demonstrate that prolactin does not mediate the suppressing effect of the suckling stimulus on LH secretion in early lactation and support our theory that the suckling stimulus controls the LH and prolactin secretion independently at the hypothalamic level.
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