Autonomous FSH synthesis in vitro in anterior pituitary glands and grafts from female rats

1991 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. M. J. van Dieten ◽  
J. de Koning ◽  
G. P. van Rees

ABSTRACT When pituitary glands from intact female, but not from ovariectomized rats, are incubated for 8 h in medium TC199 without further additives, FSH is synthesized. This LHRH-independent (or autonomous) FSH synthesis is prevented when bovine follicular fluid (bFF) is added to the incubation medium. Results from preliminary experiments, however, indicate no clear autonomous FSH synthesis after long-term absence of LHRH. To investigate the regulatory mechanisms involved in autonomous FSH synthesis and release, pituitary glands (exposed to endogenous LHRH) and pituitary grafts (not exposed to endogenous LHRH) from intact and ovariectomized rats were incubated for 8 h in medium TC199. Total FSH content (FSH released plus FSH remaining in the tissue) was compared with that in non-incubated glands or grafts, giving an indication of FSH synthesis. In addition, some of the animals were given LHRH pulses for 40 h before incubation. When pituitary tissue was taken from intact female rats, FSH synthesis occurred in the animals' own glands and in grafts from LHRH-pretreated rats. No FSH synthesis was seen in ovariectomized rats with or without pretreatment with bFF and/or LHRH. However, when ovariectomized rats had been pretreated with oestrogen, FSH synthesis was measured in vitro after pulsatile LHRH treatment in vivo. The results indicate that autonomous FSH synthesis in vitro is dependent upon previous (in vivo) exposure of the glands to both oestrogen and LHRH. Journal of Endocrinology (1991) 129, 27–33

1982 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 501-506 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. J. Jenner ◽  
J. de Koning ◽  
G. P. van Rees

Abstract. Inhibin-like activity in steroid-free bovine follicular fluid (bFF) is demonstrated using an in vitro technique with hemi-pituitary glands from intact female (second day of dioestrus) and ovariectomized rats: synthesis as well as basal release of FSH, but not of LH, are inhibited profoundly. The results confirm and extend data from other investigators on the action of inhibin-like material. The effect of the inhibin-like activity is shown to be reversible, as synthesis and the rise of basal release are restored when bFF is withdrawn from the incubation medium. Synthesis of FSH seems to be inhibited earlier than basal release, and it is suggested that the inhibin-like material acts only directly on FSH synthesis. Some possibilities of the mechanisms of action of inhibin-like activity are discussed.


1981 ◽  
Vol 88 (3) ◽  
pp. 375-379
Author(s):  
J. DULLAART

Hemipituitary glands of immature female rats, aged 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 and 35 days and either ovariectomized or sham-operated 5 days earlier, were incubated for 2 h in vitro with or without LH releasing hormone. Concentrations of LH and FSH were determined at the end of the incubations in the incubation media and in the hemipituitary glands, and also in the sera collected at the beginning of the incubation experiments. Results showed that in many instances gonadotrophin release was higher after incubation of glands of ovariectomized rats than with glands of control animals. However, these effects of ovariectomy were much smaller than those observed in vivo and were generally absent in rats of less than 20 days of age. It was concluded that ovariectomy may change the secretory characteristics of the gonadotrophic cells of immature rats but that such changes were largely restricted to immature rats older than 20 days.


1980 ◽  
Vol 85 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. BÍRÓ

SUMMARY Ovariectomy caused an increase in the metabolism of pituitary nucleic acids. This effect was reversed in vivo by a biphasic action of oestradiol-17β which first facilitated RNA metabolism after 8 h and then inhibited it 16 h after intraperitoneal injection. To analyse the origin of this biphasic effect the roles of LH releasing hormone (LH-RH) and hysterectomy were examined. Incorporation of uridine into the RNA of the anterior pituitary gland of female rats was inhibited both in vivo and in vitro by LH-RH. Hysterectomy augmented the increase in the RNA metabolism caused by ovariectomy whereas steroid-free uterine extracts inhibited the increase significantly. We have concluded that extrapituitary factors may be involved in the effects of oestrogen on the metabolism of pituitary nucleic acids.


1980 ◽  
Vol 95 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Knut Nordenström ◽  
Anita Sjögren ◽  
Lars Hamberger

Abstract. Immature female rats were injected sc with a single dose of PMSG to induce growth and maturation of ovarian follicles. In the morning of prooestrus the rats were given a single ip injection of LH (10 μg/rat) or 0.154 m NaCl, 2 h prior to sacrifice. Granulosa cells were isolated from the pre-ovulatory follicles and incubated in Krebs bicarbonate buffer, for 1 h with or without in vitro addition of various test substances. Following incubation the amounts of cAMP in tissue plus medium were determined. It was found that the isolated granulosa cells exposed to LH in vivo responded to the addition of LH in vitro with a production of high amounts of cAMP, i.e. these cells were not refractory to LH stimulation and in fact responded better than granulosa cells isolated from ovaries not exposed to LH in vivo. The addition to the incubation medium of follicular fluid (FFl) obtained from pre-ovulatory follicles decreased the effect of LH in vitro when added at a final concentration of 1% and completely abolished it at a concentration of 3%. Removal of steroids from the FFl did not influence the inhibitory effect and the addition of a phosphodiesterase inhibitor (IBMX) in vitro did not alter the results in principle. These results point to the existence of a factor in the FF1 which interacts with the sensitivity of the isolated preovulatory granulosa cells to repeated exposures to LH. Characterization of this factor is subject to further investigations.


1961 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 485-497 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. P. van Rees

ABSTRACT The hypothesis that steroid sex hormones influence pituitary F. S. H. by independent actions on its production and capacity of the gland to release it has been investigated by means of incubation experiments. During incubation, rat pituitary glands released considerable amounts of F. S. H. into the medium. Inactivation of F. S. H. during incubation could not be demonstrated; once (in females) some production of F. S. H. was even observed. The amount of F. S. H. which is released into the medium is influenced by the quantity of F. S. H. stored in the hypophyses. Hypophyses from male rats pretreated with oestradiol released relatively more F. S. H. into the medium than hypophyses from control animals. On the other hand, pretreatment with testosterone caused the pituitary glands to release less F. S. H. into the medium. In agreement with these results, hypophyses from intact male rats released relatively less F. S. H. than hypophyses from intact female rats. These facts support the hypothesis that androgens depress pituitary F. S. H.-secretion by inhibiting the capacity to release it, while oestrogens, which can even promote this property of the pituitary gland, also act by directly inhibiting its production.


1999 ◽  
Vol 277 (1) ◽  
pp. E49-E55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiow-Chwen Tsai ◽  
Chien-Chen Lu ◽  
Jiann-Jong Chen ◽  
Yu-Chung Chiao ◽  
Shyi-Wu Wang ◽  
...  

The effects of salmon calcitonin (sCT) on the production of progesterone and secretion of luteinizing hormone (LH) were examined in female rats. Diestrous rats were intravenously injected with saline, sCT, human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), or hCG plus sCT. Ovariectomized (Ovx) rats were injected with saline or sCT. In the in vitro experiments, granulosa cells and anterior pituitary glands (APs) were incubated with the tested drugs. Plasma LH levels of Ovx rats were reduced by sCT injection. Administration of sCT decreased the basal and hCG-stimulated progesterone release in vivo and in vitro. 8-Bromo-cAMP dose dependently increased progesterone production but did not alter the inhibitory effect of sCT. H-89 did not potentiate the inhibitory effect of sCT. Higher doses of 25-hydroxycholesterol and pregnenolone stimulated progesterone production and diminished the inhibitory effects of sCT. sCT did not decrease basal release of LH by APs, but pretreatment of sCT decreased gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-stimulated LH secretion. These results suggested that sCT inhibits progesterone production in rats by preventing the stimulatory effect of GnRH on LH release in rat APs and acting directly on ovarian granulosa cells to decrease the activities of post-cAMP pathway and steroidogenic enzymes.


Author(s):  
P. W. Coates ◽  
C. A. Blake ◽  
D. S. Maxwell ◽  
C. H. Sawyer

In rats, physiological studies show that ovariectomy results in a reduced concentration of circulating prolactin. Conversely, ovariectomized rats given estrogen have elevated serum prolactin and increased amounts of prolactin in the anterior pituitary gland. Separate electron microscopic studies suggest modifications in fine structure of prolactin producing (LTH) cells based on relatively large cumulative amounts of estrogen given alone or with comparably high doses of progesterone to adult virgin female or ovariectomized rats. This study was undertaken to provide a correlated morphological and physiological investigation of LTH cells and prolactin levels in a model commonly used by many researchers.Six to seven weeks after bilateral ovariectomy, a group of adult female rats was primed by a subcutaneous injection of 50 ng of estradiol benzoate and 25 mg of progesterone.


1980 ◽  
Vol 87 (3) ◽  
pp. 383-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Y. ADASHI ◽  
A. J. W. HSUEH ◽  
S. S. C. YEN

Alterations in the concentrations of oestrogen receptors in the uterus, pituitary gland and hypothalamus during the 2 weeks following a single administration of clomiphene citrate (Clomid) to immature, bilaterally ovariectomized rats were investigated. Examination of the uterine wet weight at 1, 7 and 14 days following a single injection of Clomid (100 μg, 250 μg or 10 mg) indicated significant time- and dose-related increments from a control value of 45 ± 2 (s.e.m.) mg to a maximum of 123 ± 3 mg (250 μg dose at 14 days). In contrast, a single injection of oestradiol led to a transient increase in the uterine weight on day 1 to 94 ± 6 mg, but was without effect by days 7 and 14. Analysis of the uterine DNA content 7 and 14 days after treatment with Clomid revealed significant increments from control values of 390 ± 10 μg to a high level of 558 ± 8 μg (10 mg dose at 7 days). There was a transient retention of nuclear oestrogen receptors and rapid replenishment of cytoplasmic oestrogen receptors in less than 24 h in the uteri of animals treated with oestradiol (25 μg), but determinations of receptor content in Clomid-treated animals revealed prolonged retention of nuclear receptors and delayed replenishment of cytoplasmic receptors. The duration and extent of retention of nuclear receptors and depletion of cytoplasmic receptors after treatment with Clomid were found to be dose-dependent. Fourteen days after Clomid treatment, levels of oestrogen receptors in nuclei from the uterus were still raised in all treatment groups, whereas replenishment of cytoplasmic receptors was complete in animals treated with the lower doses (100 and 250 μg) of Clomid. A single injection of Clomid (250 μg) induced similar prolonged retention of nuclear receptors and delayed depletion of cytoplasmic receptors in pituitary tissue. In contrast, changes in the content of oestrogen receptors in the hypothalamus following Clomid treatment were minimal. The limited effect of Clomid on hypothalamic tissue may mean that the pituitary gland is a more important target for this compound than is the hypothalamus. The findings have confirmed earlier reports on the long-term uterotrophic effect of Clomid and have suggested that under these long-term, in-vivo conditions, Clomid acts in the uterus and pituitary gland as a long-acting oestrogen characterized by prolonged retention of oestrogen receptors in the nucleus and delayed, but otherwise effective, replenishment of the oestrogen receptors in the cytoplasm.


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