Abstract

Two weeks after operation the effects of castration on all types of mitotic adenohypophysial cells in 30-day-old (immature) and 75-day-old (mature) male rats were studied immunohistochemically by light microscopy. The total number of mitotic cells in gland specimens increased 1.4 times in immature rats, but remained unchanged in mature animals; mitotic activity (mitotic cell number/mm2) was not affected in either age group. The population of mitotic gonadotrophs increased five to six times in comparison with intact controls. In addition, the percentage of mitotic gonadotrophs and their mitotic activity were raised in both age groups. Castration affected the mitosis of prolactin cells. The percentage of mitotic prolactin cells was reduced by one-third in castrated immature rats, but the total number and percentage of mitotic prolactin cells, as well as their mitotic activity, was reduced by about two-thirds in mature castrated rats. No significant changes in mitotic ACTH, TSH, GH and immunonegative cells were found after castration in either group of animals. Mitotic cells were more numerous in the anterior than in the posterior region of the gland in normal (uncastrated) immature rats, but were uniformly scattered in both regions in normal mature rats. On the other hand, castration induced a high population of mitotic cells in the anterior region regardless of age. This high population was the result of the enhanced mitosis of gonadotrophs. It is concluded that 2 weeks after castration the increment of mitotic divisions of all types of pituitary cells is age-dependent, and that mitosis takes place frequently in gonadotrophs and less frequently in prolactin cells.

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