Abstract

SUMMARY The possibility that luteinizing hormone releasing factor (LH-RF) not only stimulates the secretion of luteinizing hormone (LH) but also has the ability to prime the anterior pituitary gland so that further exposure to LH-RF enhances the responsiveness of the gonadotrophs has been investigated. The effect of two successive i.v. injections of the same dose of LH-RF (50 ng/100 g body weight) on the concentration of LH in plasma was determined in rats anaesthetized with sodium pentobarbitone. Blood samples were collected from the external jugular vein immediately before and at frequent intervals after the injections of LH-RF, and plasma concentrations of LH and, in some samples, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) were measured by radioimmunoassay. In rats anaesthetized with sodium pentobarbitone at 13.30 h of pro-oestrus and injected i.v. with two successive doses of LH-RF, separated by an interval of 30, 60, 120 or 240 min, the LH response to the second injection was significantly greater than that to the first. The LH response was greatest when the two doses were separated by an interval of 60 min. The FSH response to the second injection of LH-RF given 60 min after the first was not significantly different from that to the first injection. Compared with pro-oestrus, the priming effect of LH-RF was much less at metoestrus and dioestrus, and could not be demonstrated at oestrus. Ovariectomy on the morning of dioestrus reduced the LH responses to the first and second injections of LH-RF given 60 min apart on the afternoon of pro-oestrus, an effect which was partially reversed by administration of oestradiol benzoate shortly after ovariectomy. These findings together with the fact that administration of oestradiol benzoate at metoestrus increased the magnitude of the priming effect of LH-RF at dioestrus suggest that the response at pro-oestrus is dependent upon the rise in plasma oestradiol-17β which reaches a peak on the morning of pro-oestrus. Although oestrogen plays an important role in determining the magnitude of the priming effect of LH-RF, it appears that none of the steroids secreted by either the ovaries or the adrenal glands mediates this effect since the profile and magnitude of the LH responses to the two doses of LH-RF injected at pro-oestrus into rats adrenalectomized and ovariectomized before the first injection of LH-RF were comparable to those in control animals. The possible role which the priming effect of LH-RF may play in the development of the preovulatory surge of LH in the rat and man is discussed.

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