Discovery of the luteinizing hormone of the anterior pituitary gland

2004 ◽  
Vol 287 (5) ◽  
pp. E818-E819 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Maurice Goodman

This essay looks at the historical significance of an APS classic paper that is freely available online: Fevold HL, Hisaw FL, Leonard SL. The gonad stimulating and the luteinizing hormones of the anterior lobe of the hypophesis. Am J Physiol 97: 291—301, 1931 ( http://ajplegacy.physiology.org/cgi/reprint/97/2/291 ).

2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 649-658
Author(s):  
Ahmed MR Abdo ◽  
Mohamed E El-Beeh ◽  
Sameer H. Qari ◽  
Dina A El-badry ◽  
Hassan IH El-Sayyad

Increase consumption of high fat diet was found to alter blood sugar level similar to diabetes and contributed to the development of obesity and affected the reproductive function of both sexes. The study aimed to clarify the influence of diabetes and or hypercholesterolemia on the cytological picture of cells of the anterior lobe of pituitary gland of male albino rats. Eighteen male albino rats weighing approximately 120 gram body weight were divided into three main groups; control, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes (single i.p. 40 mg streptozotocin/kg B.wt plus 100mg. nicotinamide /kg body weight) and hypercholesterolemia (diet containing 3% cholesterol). Dietary feeding on cholesterol and diabetes were carried out for 12 weeks. At the end of treatment, animals were sacrificed, and pituitary glands were separated and their anterior lobe was processed for cytological investigations by transmission electron microscopy. The present study revealed that the rats subjected to experimental diabetes and/ or hypercholesterolemia exhibited a decrease of the secretory granules within the gonadotroph cells somatotroph and corticotrophin cells. There was a detected intracellular accumulation of fat globules in both the gonado- and sommatotroph cells. The authors reported that the altered cytological structures of the secretory function of the anterior pituitary gland led to marked impairment of the male hormonal level and causing infertility.


1936 ◽  
Vol 32 (9) ◽  
pp. 1152-1153
Author(s):  
J. Novak

Removal of the anterior pituitary gland in infantile animals leads to a cessation of the development of the gonads and growth, as well as to a number of metabolic changes. As shown by relevant studies, the anterior lobe of the pituitary gland produces a hormone that gives a powerful impulse to the sex glands and causes all the phenomena of early puberty in infantile animals for several days.


1974 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 553-572 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. AIYER ◽  
G. FINK

SUMMARY The role of ovarian hormones in the development of increased sensitivity of the anterior pituitary gland to synthetic luteinizing hormone releasing factor (LH-RF) which occurs before and during the preovulatory surge of luteinizing hormone (LH) in the rat has been examined. The response of the pituitary gland was determined, with respect to the secretion of LH and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), after the intravenous injection of 50 ng LH-RF/100 g body weight. The LH-RF was injected 30–60 min after the administration of sodium pentobarbitone at either 13.30 h or 18.80 h of pro-oestrus. Blood samples were collected immediately before and at frequent intervals after the injection of LH-RF, and the concentration of LH and FSH in these samples was measured by radioimmunoassay. Ovariectomy at 10.00–11.00 h of dioestrus reduced the LH response to LH-RF injected at 14.00 h of pro-oestrus, while oestradiol benzoate administered immediately after ovariectomy restored and even augmented this response. These data together with the finding that administration of the antioestrogen, ICI 46 474, at 17.00 h of dioestrus reduced the LH response to LH-RF injected on the afternoon of pro-oestrus indicates that the initial phase of increased pituitary sensitivity to LH-RF is dependent upon the marked rise in the concentration of oestradiol-17β in plasma which precedes the preovulatory surge of LH. The abrupt, marked increase in pituitary sensitivity to LH-RF, which, in the normal cycle, occurs between 14.00 and 18.30 h of pro-oestrus, failed to develop in rats ovariectomized on the morning of dioestrus whether or not oestradiol benzoate was administered after the operation. However, the LH response to LH-RF injected on the evening of pro-oestrus increased significantly when progesterone was administered at 13.00 h of pro-oestrus in rats ovariectomized and treated with oestradiol benzoate at 10.00–11.00 h of dioestrus. This suggests that the development of the second phase of increased pituitary sensitivity to LH-RF depends, at least partially, on progesterone acting on an oestrogen-primed pituitary gland. The concentrations of FSH in blood samples taken before injection of LH-RF at either 14.00 or 18.30 h of pro-oestrus were significantly greater in ovariectomized compared with those in sham-operated rats. In contrast the FSH responses, in terms of the mean maximal increments, were not significantly different in the various groups irrespective of the nature or time of operation or the time of injection of LH-RF. The FSH response to LH-RF was not appreciably altered by treatment with either oestradiol benzoate or progesterone immediately after ovariectomy although it was increased significantly by the sequential administration of oestrogen and progesterone. The significance of the findings that under certain conditions there were considerable differences between the LH and FSH responses to synthetic LH-RF is discussed with respect to the hypothesis that there is a common releasing factor for both gonadotrophins.


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