Abstract

Hyperprolactinaemia inhibits gonadotrophin secretion in males and females of many species. The aim of this study was to determine the role of the adrenal gland in mediating the inhibitory effects of prolactin by contrasting the effects of acute hyperprolactinaemia on LH and FSH secretion in adrenal-intact and adrenalectomized rats with and without physiological corticosterone replacement. Adult male rats were administered purified ovine prolactin every 12 h (2.4 mg per injection s.c.) beginning at the time of castration. Blood samples were collected every 3 h for 36 h, then every 12 h until 10 days after castration. Ovine prolactin significantly reduced LH secretion in all groups from approximately 15 to 48 h after castration. In contrast, plasma FSH concentrations were reduced by ovine prolactin from 21 to 48 h only in the adrenal-intact rats and not in the adrenalectomized or adrenalectomized plus corticosterone groups. In all groups, ovine prolactin inhibited endogenous prolactin secretion in rats by short-loop autofeedback as soon as 3 h after the first ovine prolactin injection and throughout the 10 days of the study. Adrenalectomy per se, with or without corticosterone replacement, also had a differential effect on LH and FSH secretion after castration, causing only a transient delay in the rise in LH after castration, but inducing a significant and long-lasting inhibition of FSH secretion. The results demonstrate that ovine prolactin-induced suppression of LH secretion after castration occurs with or without the adrenal glands. Suppression of FSH secretion after castration by ovine prolactin, however, may involve an adrenal component.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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