Abstract

Beta-thyrotropin (TSH)-producing cells in the pituitary pars distalis of female rats were studied using rabbit anti-rat beta-thyrotropin (TSH) serum and a peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) immunohistochemical procedure. Animals were neonatally treated with 1 mg estradiol-dipropionate (EDP) and sacrificed at different stages of development up to adulthood. Intact females of the corresponding age served as the controls. Morphometry and stereology were used to evaluate the changes in TSH-cell number and volume densities of the cells and nuclei. All morphometric parameters examined in estradiol-treated animals showed a significant decrease in comparison with immunoreactive TSH cells of age-matched controls. The most prominent EDP-induced changes were evident in peripubertal 38-day-old rats, the number and volumetric densities of both TSH cells and their nuclei being reduced by about 90% compared to intact pituitary. This decrease in the number and volume densities of TSH cells in EDP-treated rats explicitly demonstrated that this hormone, applied neonatally, has an inhibitory effect on TSH-immunoreactive cells up to adulthood, in accordance with our earlier data obtained by light and electron microscopy.

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