Abstract

In the frog, Rana esculenta, two molecular forms of GnRH, coeluting with chicken (c) GnRH-II and salmon (s) GnRH, have been detected using HPLC and radioimmunoassay. Mammalian (m) GnRH seems to be also present. In amphibians the role of cGnRH-II seems to be primarily the involvement in the regulation of neuroendocrine processes and, while the mGnRH has been postulated to act as a neurotransmitter and/or neuromodulator, the activity of sGnRH-like material has not been investigated. Therefore, we have treated the frogs with single or multiple injections of cGnRH-II or sGnRH (6 μg) or both peptides (6 μg of each) to detect differences in the response measured as testicular or plasma androgen (testosterone plus 5α-dihydrotestosterone) concentration during the annual reproductive cycle. The basal profile of testicular and plasma androgen shows that the spring peak disappeared in control animals given multiple injections and kept in short-term captivity. We show in the treatment with cGnRH-II and/or sGnRH that the effects of the peptides depend on the season, the experimental design, and the tissue in which androgen levels were measured. In particular, both peptides strongly stimulate androgen production during the autumn-winter period, the time of the greater response to the GnRHs when basal levels of steroids are highest.

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