Abstract
The following study was designed to test whether the change in the amplitude of the adrenal rhythm and the response to stress seen at puberty in female rats is dependent upon stimulation of the adrenal system by gonadal steroids. Rats were gonadectomized either at two days of age or at 21 days of age and periodic blood samples were taken by cardiac puncture and assayed for corticosterone (B) by a fluorometric procedure. Ovariectomy at weaning age (21 days) had no effect on adrenal function until the time of normal puberty onset. In intact animals, a rise in resting levels of corticosterone and an increase in the incremental response to ether stress was noted at 35 days of age. (Puberty in females was 35.3 ± 1.2 days as indicated by vaginal opening). Ovulation occurred the following day in 9/10 rats. Gonadectomy at two days of age had essentially the same effect as later gonadectomy in females. By 70 days of age, resting corticosterone values and stress responses in gonadectomized females reached levels similar to intact females. It is concluded that an independent adrenarche can occur in females but that gonadal steroids present at the time of puberty modulate the timing of this process.
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