Abstract

The present study was designed to further assess the mechanism of action of GnRH and GnRH analogues. Both the Nal-Glu GnRH antagonist and the D-Trp6 GnRH agonist were administered sequentially to nine normal, post-menopausal women. A baseline study of pulsatile LH, FSH and free alpha-subunit secretion was performed, with sampling every 10 min for 8 h, and then repeated 8 h after a single subcutaneous injection of Nal-Glu GnRH antagonist (5 mg). Sampling was repeated 21 days after the intramuscular injection of a depot preparation of D-Trp6 GnRH (3.75 mg) in the same women. The baseline sampling period showed synchronous pulses of LH and free alpha-subunit. The antagonist Nal-Glu decreased plasma LH (71%) and free alpha-subunit (43%). However, with the single dose of 5 mg, pulsatile LH and free alpha-subunit release were not completely suppressed and remained temporally correlated. The GnRH agonist had a potent inhibitory action on plasma immunoreactive LH (IRMA) (93%). In contrast, it increased the mean plasma levels of free alpha-subunit from 1.66 +/- 0.01 to 5.06 +/- 0.02 micrograms/l (205%). The pulsatile secretory patterns of both LH and free alpha-subunit were abolished by the agonist. Immunoreactive FSH levels were decreased by the antagonist (24%) and suppressed by the agonist (93%). The pulsatile study confirms the different mechanism of action of GnRH analogues. Following antagonist administration, low amplitude free alpha-subunit pulses persist and are synchronous with residual LH pulses. In contrast, LH and free alpha-subunit are not maintained under agonist treatment. These data provide evidence for the differential regulation of LH and free alpha-subunit by GnRH.

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