Abstract

The concentrations of prolactin in plasma were measured before and after the injection of TRH in pregnant ewes and in non-pregnant ewes during the breeding season and seasonal anoestrus. During the first 80 days of pregnancy basal concentrations or prolactin were low and stable but thereafter increased progressively to reach maximum values at Day 140. During a comparable time of year (December-April) basal concentrations of prolactin in non-pregnant ewes were not significantly different from those found between Days 20 and 120 of pregnancy. At other times of the year basal concentrations of prolactin in non-pregnant ewes were elevated during anoestrus and declined markedly at the onset of the breeding season. In pregnant and non-pregnant ewes the responsiveness of the pituitary gland to stimulation with TRH was significantly correlated with the basal concentration of prolactin in plasma: the raised concentration of prolactin at Day 140 of pregnancy and in July in non-pregnant ewes was associated with the greatest release of prolactin from the pituitary gland. A change in the responsiveness of the pituitary gland may play an important role in the overall control of prolactin secretion in the ewe.

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