Hypophysial responses to continuous and intermittent delivery of hypopthalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone

Science (New York, N.Y.), 202(4368), 631-633

DOI 10.1126/science.100883 PMID 100883 Source

Abstract

In rhesus monkeys with hypothalamic lesions that abolish gonadotropic hormone release by the pituitary gland, the constant infusion of exogenous gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) fails to restore sustained gonadotropin secretion. In marked contrast, intermittent administration of the synthetic decapeptide once per hour, the physiological frequency of gonadotropin release in the monkeys, reestablishes pituitary gonadotropin secretion. This phenomenon is attributable to the pattern of GnRH delivery rather than to the amounts of this hormone to which the cells of the pituitary are exposed. Moreover, the initiation of continuous GnRH administration in animals with lesions and in which gonadotropin secretion is reestablished by intermittent GnRH replacement can result in a "desensitization" or "down regulation" of the processes responsible for gonadotropin release.

Topics

pulsatile gnrh secretion, gonadotropin releasing hormone physiology, intermittent gnrh administration, continuous gnrh infusion, gnrh desensitization down regulation, luteinizing hormone pulsatile release, ovulation physiology gnrh, hypothalamic pituitary axis, gnrh frequency gonadotropin secretion, ovulation induction gnrh protocol, pituitary gonadotropin regulation, physiological gnrh pulsatility

Cite this article

Belchetz, P. E., Plant, T. M., Nakai, Y., Keogh, E. J., & Knobil, E. (1978). Hypophysial responses to continuous and intermittent delivery of hypopthalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone. *Science (New York, N.Y.)*, *202*(4368), 631-633. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.100883

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