IMMUNOCYTOCHEMICAL EVIDENCE THAT LUTEINIZING HORMONE (LH) AND FOLLICLE STIMULATING HORMONE (FSH) ARE PRESENT IN THE SAME CELL TYPE IN THE RHESUS MONKEY PITUITARY GLAND1

Endocrinology ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 98 (6) ◽  
pp. 1554-1557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Damon C. Herbert
1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 135-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard F. Weick ◽  
Vaclav Pitelka ◽  
David L. Thompson

Experiments were performed to study the responsiveness of the pituitary to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) during the dynamic changes in gonadotropin secretion associated with the estrogen-induced luteinizing hormone (LH) surge in the ovariectomized (OVX) rhesus monkey. Silastic capsules filled with estradiol-17-β were implanted subcutaneously in ovariectomized rhesus monkeys, resulting in an initial lowering of circulating LH and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentrations followed by an LH–FSH surge. GnRH was injected intravenously just before estrogen implantation, during the negative feedback response and during the rising, the peak, and the declining phases of the LH surge. The LH and FSH responses during the negative feedback phase were as large as those before estrogen treatment (control responses). During the rising phase of the LH surge, the acute response to GnRH injection did not differ significantly from the control response, but the responses 60 and 120 min after injection were somewhat increased. During the declining phase of the LH surge, the pituitary was not responsive to exogenous GnRH, although LH probably continued to be secreted at this time since the LH surge decreased more slowly than predicted by the normal rate of disappearance of LH in the monkey. We conclude that an increased duration of response to GnRH may be an important part of the mechanism by which estrogen induces the LH surge, but we do not see evidence of increased sensitivity of the pituitary to GnRH as an acute releasing factor at that time.Key words: LH surge, GnRH, FSH, ovariectomized monkey.


1973 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 625-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Robyn ◽  
P. Leleux ◽  
L. Vanhaelst ◽  
J. Golstein ◽  
M. Herlant ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Sections of fixed human pituitaries were investigated by an indirect immunofluorescence technique using antisera obtained following immunization of rabbits with human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG), human hypophyseal gonadotrophins (HHG) and bovine hypophyseal thyrotrophin (BTSH) preparations. After microphotography of immunofluorescent positive cells, the tissue sections were stained by the Alcian blue (or Thionine aldehyde)-Periodic Acid Schiff-Orange G method. The microscopical fields which had been examined in immunofluorescence were then relocated and photographed again. A correlation was established between the cells reacting with an antiserum and the cell types of the morphological nomenclatures for human adenohypophysis proposed by Romeis (1940) and by Pearse & van Noorden (1963) and those of the functional classification proposed by Herlant & Pasteels (1967). The specificity of the antisera was checked by immunoelectrophoresis and by neutralization of the biological activities of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and BTSH. After selective absorption of the FSH neutralizing antibodies an anti-HCG serum became specific for LH. After selective absorption of the LH neutralizing antibodies an anti-HHG serum was found specific for FSH. The anti-BTSH sera neutralized the biological activity of human TSH, but cross reacted in immunoelectrophoresis with ovine LH and in immunofluorescence with the gonadotrophic cells of human pituitaries. After absorption with HCG, an anti-BTSH serum produced a specific immunofluorescence in large purple blue to dark blue Romeis δ cells filled with fine Alcian blue (or Thionine aldehyde) positive granules. This cell type is equivalent to the S2 mucoids of Pearse or to the "Thyrotrophs" of Herlant. The anti-LH and anti-FSH sera cross-reacted with TSH. Indeed, the S2 mucoids were also fluorescence positive with both anti-gonadotrophic sera. In addition, both anti-LH and anti-FSH sera produced a specific immunofluorescence in the group of purple coloured Romeis δ cells closely related to the S1 mucoids of Pearse. This would indicate that the same cell type contains immunoreactive LH and FSH, which is in contradiction with the description of two different gonadotrophic cell types based on histochemical stainings of human and animal pituitaries obtained in various physiopathological conditions.


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