The pattern of testosterone replacement influences the recovery of the stimulatory effect of clonidine on growth hormone (GH) secretion in orchidectomized rats |
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Authors: | M Tena-Sempere L Pinilla and E Aguilar |
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Institution: | Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Córdoba University, Córdoba, Spain |
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Abstract: | It has previously been described that the growth hormone (GH) releasing effect of clonidine (CLO), an agonist of 2-adrenoreceptors, disappears after orchidectomy and is restored by testosterone replacement when started immediately after orchidectomy. In the present experiments, the effects of CLO on GH release was analysed in long-term (LTO; 12 weeks) and short-term (STO; 2 weeks) orchidectomized rats. In the first experiment, LTO males were implanted with silastic capsules containing testosterone 10 weeks after orchidectomy and killed 2 weeks later, 15 min after injection of CLO (150 μg/kg) or vehicle. In the second experiment, adult males were implanted with testosterone at the moment of orchidectomy and decapitated 2 or 12 weeks later, 15 min after vehicle or CLO administration. In addition, in order to evaluate the effects of orchidectomy and androgen replacement on 2 agonists GH release further, prepubertal males (21-days-old) implanted with testosterone or 5--androstane-3-, 17β diol (-diol) at the moment of orchidectomy were killed 2 weeks later, 15 min after ketamine-xylazine (an 2 agonist) administration. Finally, 10-day-old males (orchidectomized 72 h before) were decapitated 15 min after CLO or vehicle administration. Our results show that: (a) LTO and STO abolished the stimulatory effect of clonidine on GH secretion; (b) orchidectomy also abolished the stimulatory effect of clonidine in neonatal rats and that of xylazine in prepubertal males; (c) testosterone implanted at the moment of orchidectomy prevented the loss of the CLO effect in LTO and STO, but testosterone-delayed administration in LTO was unable to restore the effectiveness of CLO inducing GH release. We conclude that orchidectomy at all ages tested abolishes GH secretion induced by 2 agonists, which suggests that the functionality of -adrenergic receptors involved in the control of GH secretion is critically dependent on a permanent exposure to testosterone in males. |
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