Abstract

In female rats ovariectomy (OVX) on the morning of diestrus day 2 resulted in a prompt (within 8 h) and gradual increase in LH release, whereas a similar operation on estrus did not raise serum LH until 24 h later. In proestrous females, OVX in the morning neither prevented the anticipated LH surge on that evening, nor increased LH release on the next morning. Since circulating concentrations of estradiol (E2) are progressively increased during diestrus day 2 and proestrus, this pattern of E2 secretion may affect the acute increase in LH secretion following OVX. To test such a hypothesis, we examined the effects of large, sustained or large, transient increases in circulating estrogen on the subsequent increase in gonadotropin secretion after OVX. On the morning of diestrus day 1 a subcutaneous injection of 20 micrograms estradiol benzoate (EB) produced prompt and large increases in both serum E2 and estrone (E1) for about 2 days, despite OVX of females at 24 h after the EB injection. An injection of 20 micrograms 17 beta-estradiol (E2) also promptly increased both serum E2 and E1. micrograms E2 injection were twice that observed after 20 micrograms EB, and both E2 and E1 returned to low baseline values within 24 h after the E2 injection. In contrast, administration of 1 microgram EB only produced small and transient rises in serum E2 and E1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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