The Effects of Electrical Stimulation of the Medial Preoptic Area and the Medial Amygdala on Maternal Responsiveness in Female Rats

1997 ◽  
Vol 807 (1 Integrative N) ◽  
pp. 602-605 ◽  
Author(s):  
HYWEL D. MORGAN ◽  
JASON A. WATCHUS ◽  
ALISON S. FLEMING
1976 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. FINK ◽  
M. G. JAMIESON

SUMMARY Blood was collected from the cut pituitary stalk of male and female rats before and during the application of an electrical stimulus to the medial preoptic area. The plasma was assayed for immunoreactive LH releasing factor (RF) by a double antibody radioimmunoassay using a specific antiserum raised in rabbits against the free acid derivative of the decapeptide LH-RF conjugated to bovine serum albumin. The decapeptide (used as a standard) and pituitary stalk plasma cross-reacted in a similar manner with the antiserum. Stimulation of the preoptic area increased significantly the amount of LH-RF in pituitary stalk plasma in both male and female rats. The increase in LH-RF was linearly related to the strength of the stimulating current, and the amount of LH-RF liberated diminished on cessation of the stimulus. The concentration of LH-RF in pituitary stalk plasma from female rats was significantly greater than that in jugular venous plasma. The magnitudes of the mean increments of LH-RF in pituitary stalk plasma (stimulation minus pre-stimulation values) at various times of the oestrous cycle in female rats suggests that between 18.00 h of dioestrus and 13.00 h of pro-oestrus there is an increase in sensitivity of the LH-RF secretory mechanism to electrical stimulation. However, the increments decreased in magnitude between 13.00 and 18.00 h of pro-oestrus, indicating that the marked increase in responsiveness of the hypothalamo-hypophysial system to electrical stimulation which occurs during this period is due mainly to a change in sensitivity of the pituitary gonadotrophs to LH-RF. The LH-RF in pituitary stalk plasma collected before application of the stimulus was higher at some of the times examined during pro-oestrus than at other times of the oestrous cycle. A higher level of the secretion of the factor may be important for the full development of the priming effect of LH-RF and, consequently, the marked increase in responsiveness of the pituitary gland which occurs during the afternoon of pro-oestrus.


1976 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 501-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
NANCY M. SHERWOOD ◽  
SHARON A. CHIAPPA ◽  
G. FINK

SUMMARY The effects of sex steroid hormones on the responsiveness of the neural mechanism responsible for the secretion of LH-RF have been examined in the female rat. Responsiveness was determined at pro-oestrus by measuring the increments in immunoreactive LH-RF of pituitary stalk blood produced by electrical stimulation of the medial preoptic area or median eminence. Ovariectomy on the morning of dioestrus reduced the LH-RF response to preoptic stimulation while oestradiol benzoate (OB) or testosterone propionate (TP) administered immediately after ovariectomy significantly augmented the response. The facilitatory effect of TP was possibly due to its conversion to an aromatized derivative since 5α-dihydrotestosterone monobenzoate was ineffective. Progesterone did not facilitate preoptic responsiveness, and, when administered to animals ovariectomized at 12.00 h of pro-oestrus, reduced the LH-RF response at 18.00 h the same day. Stimulation of the median eminence produced a significantly greater increment in LH-RF than stimulation of the preoptic area. The facilitatory action of OB on the LH-RF response was less marked for median eminence compared with preoptic stimulation. The administration of ICI 46474 at 17.00 h of dioestrus did not reduce preoptic responsiveness on the morning of the next day, suggesting that this compound does not act as an 'antioestrogen' at the level of the preoptic area.


1974 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 589-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. FINK ◽  
M. S. AIYER

SUMMARY The responsiveness of the hypothalamo-hypophysial axis to electrical stimulation of the medial preoptic area was tested at various times during the oestrous cycle of the rat. Animals were anaesthetized with sodium pentobarbitone, and glass-insulated bipolar platinum electrodes were stereotaxically implanted in the medial preoptic area. The stimulus consisted of accurately balanced biphasic rectangular pulses, height 500 μA, duration 2 ms and frequency 60 Hz, applied in trains of 30 s intervals. The concentration of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in blood samples withdrawn from the external jugular vein immediately before and at frequent intervals up to 1 h after application of the stimulus was determined by radioimmunoassay. In all animals the stimulus was applied for a period of 15 min, for it was found that under these conditions the profiles of LH and FSH produced in individual animals were similar to those which followed the i.v. injection of 50 ng synthetic luteinizing hormone releasing factor (LH-RF)/100 g body wt, the minimal ovulatory dose of LH-RF in our laboratory. Both for LH and FSH, the profiles of responsiveness of the hypothalamo-hypophysial axis to electrical stimulation through the oestrous cycle resembled closely the profile of responsiveness of the anterior pituitary gland to LH-RF administered intravenously. There was a relatively gradual increase in pituitary sensitivity, in terms of the mean maximal increments, between the early afternoon of dioestrus and pro-oestrus, followed by an abrupt and marked rise which reached a peak at 18.00 and 21.00 h of pro-oestrus for LH and FSH, respectively. Sensitivity of the hypothalamo-hypophysial axis declined through oestrus and metoestrus reaching a nadir at 13.30 h of dioestrus. While these results do not exclude a change in sensitivity of the neural component of the hypothalamo-hypophysial axis during the oestrus cycle, they do indicate that the timing and magnitude of changes in sensitivity of the anterior pituitary gland to both endogenous and exogenous LH-RF are similar. This raises the possibility that a marked increase in the secretion of LH-RF during the afternoon of pro-oestrus may not be necessary for the occurrence of the surge of LH and FSH, for conceivably the latter could depend on a change in sensitivity of pituitary gonadotrophs to constant or only slightly increased levels of LH-RF in hypophysial portal blood. Our findings are compared with those of workers who have employed electrochemical stimulation of the preoptic area.


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