Comparison of the distribution of radioiodinated di- and tri-hydroxyphenylethylene estrogens in the immature female rat

1995 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 679-687 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene R. Desombre ◽  
James Pribish ◽  
Alun Hughes
Keyword(s):  
1977 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. WILKINSON ◽  
D. DE ZIEGLER ◽  
DANIELLE CASSARD ◽  
K. B. RUF

The effects of oestrogen priming on the sensitivity of the anterior pituitary gland to stimulation with gonadotrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) was investigated in immature female rats using a new organ culture technique. Hemipituitary glands obtained from animals primed with a single dose of oestradiol benzoate (OB; 20 μg/100 g body weight) released significantly more LH when pulsed with GnRH (4 nmol/l) than did control hemipituitary glands. This potentiating effect was detectable as early as 5 days after birth. After a second stimulation, LH secretion remained high. These results were compared with those obtained from animals treated to induce increased levels of endogenous oestrogen on day 26 of life. Thus, hemipituitary glands were obtained from animals given two injections of OB, an injection of pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin (PMSG) or a unilateral brain lesion placed in the basal hypothalamus. Pituitary tissue was stimulated as before with a pulse of GnRH. Two injections of OB enhanced the sensitivity to stimulation. Conversely, both PMSG and lesion treatment severely reduced the sensitivity to GnRH, although PMSG-treated and lesioned animals have been used as models for the study of ovulation.


1977 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. DE ZIEGLER ◽  
M. WILKINSON ◽  
DANIELLE CASSARD ◽  
K. B. RUF

An investigation of pituitary sensitivity, assessed in terms of increments in plasma LH and FSH concentrations, to stimulation with one or two injections of gonadotrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) was carried out on 26-day-old immature female rats which had received one of the following priming treatments: 10 μg oestradiol benzoate (OB) as a single injection on day 23 or day 25, or on both days; 10 i.u. pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin (PMSG) on day 24; an electrochemical brain lesion placed in the mediobasal hypothalamus on day 23; control animals received either vehicle alone or a sham lesion. Pituitary sensitivity assessed at 10.00 h on day 26, after one or two injections of GnRH (100 ng/100 g body weight, s.c.), was enhanced to a similar degree in the three groups treated with OB in terms of LH (P < 0-01). The FSH response also increased after OB treatment but was not statistically significant. In contrast, 48 h after the injection of PMSG (i.e. when the rats were in a 'pro-oestrous-like' condition) pituitary sensitivity in terms of both LH and FSH dropped sharply (P < 0·001). In lesioned animals, pituitary sensitivity to one injection of GnRH was unchanged. A second GnRH injection administered after a 60 min interval induced a slightly larger LH response in control animals. In contrast, the ratio of the second response to the first increased in animals treated with PMSG, despite the state of overall decrease in sensitivity, being 4·5:1 in PMSG-treated rats versus 1·4:1 in controls. In a second set of experiments, we investigated the variation of pituitary sensitivity in conjunction with an experimentally induced gonadotrophin surge. In animals treated with OB on day 23 and with 1 mg progesterone at 12·00 h on day 26, pituitary sensitivity was increased at both 14.00 and 17.00 h as compared with that in the day 23 OB-treated group at 10.00 h. The PMSG-treated animals maintained their state of decreased responsiveness at 14.00 h, but exhibited increased pituitary sensitivity at the time of the gonadotrophin surge (17.00 h). These results show that OB increases pituitary sensitivity to GnRH in 26-day-old female rats and that the induction of a gonadotrophin surge further increases this sensitivity. In contrast, PMSG-treated rats displayed a state of decreased responsiveness 48 and 52 h, but not 55 h, after the injection. Pituitary sensitivity on the second day after PMSG treatment thus clearly differs from that observed during pro-oestrus in the adult cyclic female rat.


1984 ◽  
Vol 103 (3) ◽  
pp. 317-325
Author(s):  
A. K. Brar ◽  
G. Fink

ABSTRACT The effects of catechol oestradiol and catechol oestrone on the release of LH and prolactin were investigated in immature male and female Wistar rats. In male rats both catechol oestradiol and catechol oestrone significantly increased the plasma concentration of LH, and catechol oestradiol but not catechol oestrone significantly increased the plasma concentration of prolactin and decreased the pituitary concentration of LH. The parent oestrogens, oestradiol-17β and oestrone, had no effect on plasma LH concentrations, but both increased significantly the plasma concentration of prolactin, and oestrone but not oestradiol-17β increased the pituitary concentration of LH. In immature female rats, catechol oestradiol inhibited the surge of LH and the increase in uterine weight induced by injecting pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin (PMSG). The injection of oestrone induced an increase in the plasma concentration of LH which was about nine times greater than that produced by oestradiol-17β. There were no significant differences in the effects of these steroids on plasma prolactin concentration. These results (i) confirm that in the immature male rat catechol oestrogens can stimulate LH release and show that catechol oestradiol can increase prolactin release, (ii) show that catechol oestradiol can inhibit the stimulatory effects of PMSG on LH release and uterine weight in the immature female rat, and (iii) demonstrate that oestrone can stimulate LH release in the immature female rat. J. Endocr. (1984) 103, 317-325


1957 ◽  
Vol 35 (12) ◽  
pp. 1107-1112 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. S. Wiberg ◽  
N. R. Stephenson

The immature female rat was used to detect estrogenic residues in the tissues of cattle fed a ration containing diethylstilbestrol. The criterion of response to the estrogen was the increase in uterine weight which resulted from the ingestion of the beef tissues. The weanling rat was twice as sensitive as the ovariectomized mouse to oral diethylstilbestrol. Significant levels of the estrogen were found in lean meat, liver, and kidney 24 hours after the removal of the diethylstilbestrol from the steers' diet, but such residues could not be detected when this period was extended to 48 hours.


2020 ◽  
Vol 105 ◽  
pp. 101767
Author(s):  
Seon-Young Park ◽  
Yeong-Min Yoo ◽  
Eui-Man Jung ◽  
Eui-Bae Jeung

1991 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
pp. 289-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. J. Sander ◽  
H. M. A. Meijs-Roelofs ◽  
E. C. M. van Leeuwen ◽  
P. Kramer ◽  
W. A. van Cappellen

ABSTRACT In late-prepubertal female rats passive immunoneutralization of endogenous inhibin was achieved by injection of inhibin antiserum. Effects on follicle population, timing of sexual maturation, ovulation rate at first and second oestrus and serum FSH levels were studied. Rats were injected with antiserum, (non-immune) control serum from castrated sheep (castrated serum) or their IgG fractions, or with saline on day 33 or 3 or 2 days (days −3/−2) before the expected day of first ovulation, day 38·5±0·2 (n = 70). Blood was collected from different subgroups at 8, 24 and 48 h, and at first and second oestrus after injection. At necropsy, ovaries were histologically prepared for differential counting of follicles (48 h and first oestrus) and counting of corpora lutea (CL; first and second oestrus) as an index of ovulation rate. Results from rats injected with either serum or its IgG fraction were not different, as was the case when rats were injected with either castrated serum or saline. Thus, results from groups treated with antiserum and antiserum IgG were combined and labelled 'antiserum', and the castrated serum, castrated serum IgG and saline-treated groups were combined and labelled 'control'. The activity of inhibin-neutralizing antibodies in the circulation of antiserum-treated rats was reduced by 43% between 8 h and second oestrus after injection, as determined by the binding of purified bioactive radioiodinated 31 kDa bovine inhibin. After antiserum injection on day 33, more healthy antral follicles (vol. > 100 × 105 μm3, diameter > 260 μm) were present in the ovaries at 48 h (70·6 vs 54·4; P < 0·05) and at first oestrus (73·1 vs 50·8; P < 0·05) if first oestrus was reached within 5 days, but numbers were not different if first oestrus was more than 5 days after injection (52·6 vs 50·8). The number of CL after injection of antiserum on day 33 was increased at first oestrus compared with control (13·4±0·5, n = 30, vs 10·0±0·2, n = 40; P<0·001), an effect that was even more clearly present in antiserum-injected rats ovulating within 5 days (14·4±0·7, n = 20; P < 0·001). Rats injected with antiserum at days −3/−2 showed a doubling of ovulation rate at first oestrus when compared with control animals (21·5±0·8, n = 12, vs 10·5±0·2, n = 15; P < 0·001). No differences in the number of CL was seen at second oestrus. Age and body weight on the day of first ovulation were not influenced by antiserum treatment. Serum FSH was significantly (P < 0·01) increased at 8 h after antiserum injection on either day 33 or on days −3/−2 to a level of 250 and 800% of control levels respectively. Thus, injection with inhibin–neutralizing antiserum into prepubertal female rats resulted, through an increase in serum FSH concentration 8 h after injection, in the growth of additional numbers of healthy antral follicles. Supranormal ovulation rate occurred if antiserum injections were given within the last 5 days before first ovulation, with a maximal ovulation rate after injection on days −3/−2. The data support the view that, in the immature female rat during the last 5 days before the day of first ovulation, inhibin is (through its regulation of serum FSH levels) progressively involved in the control of follicle growth and ovulation rate. Journal of Endocrinology (1991) 130, 289–296


1981 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. M. A. MEIJS-ROELOFS ◽  
P. KRAMER ◽  
L. GRIBLING-HEGGE

The inhibitory action on FSH secretion of combined oestradiol and progesterone treatment of ovariectomized, immature rats was studied at various ages. At all ages studied (13–35 days) an additional inhibitory action of progesterone, if combined with oestradiol, could be found as compared with the effect of oestradiol alone. Until 20 days of age, the rise in serum FSH concentration as measured 2 days after ovariectomy could be completely prevented by administration of 0·05 μg oestradiol/100 g body weight or by administration of a lower dose of oestradiol (0·01–0·025 μg) combined with progesterone (0·5–1·5 mg/100 g body weight). After 20 days neither oestradiol nor the combined oestradiol/progesterone treatment resulted in an FSH concentration similar to that found in intact rats. However, the lowest FSH concentrations were reached by using combinations of oestradiol and progesterone. Using progesterone alone, FSH concentration in ovariectomized rats was significantly reduced between 18 and 30 days of age, but not before or after this period. Taken together with data on uterine weight and serum concentrations of progesterone, these findings suggest that (1) both oestradiol and progesterone exert an age-dependent role in regulating FSH secretion in the immature female rat, and (2) amounts of oestradiol and progesterone capable of maintaining, in ovariectomized rats, uterine weights not different from those in intact rats will maintain near-physiological concentrations of FSH before but not after day 20. Thus, ovarian factors other than oestradiol and progesterone must be involved in the regulation of FSH secretion in the female rat after 20 days of age.


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