Abstract

An accurately timed surge of luteinizing hormone (LH), during the second half of the day of pro-oestrus in rats, is a crucial part of the endocrine signal that leads to expulsion of an ovum from an ovarian follicle. LH release is partly controlled by a number of peptides, including gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and oxytocin, which travel from the hypothalamus to the pituitary. The profile of secretion of these peptides is poorly understood. Therefore, the amounts of GnRH and oxytocin that were secreted from hypothalamic explants were determined at several time points during the day of pro-oestrus. Basal secretion of oxytocin from hypothalami taken later in pro-oestrus was greater than from hypothalami taken earlier in the day ( p < 0.02). On the other hand, basal secretion of GnRH decreased during the day of pro-oestrus ( p < 0.03). The different trends of GnRH and oxytocin secretion reveal that their secretion is regulated by distinct mechanisms. GnRH secretion was higher at midpro-oestrus than late in the day ( p < 0.05) consistent with a peak of GnRH having been observed by others in portal blood in the second half of the day of pro-oestrus. Responsiveness of oxytocin to stimulation by K + of the hypothalami declined from the early light hours to the evening dark hours ( p < 0.02). Thus, oxytocin modulation might be achieved partly by modification of intracellular processes. Melatonin, secreted during hours of darkness, is frequently involved in modulating time-dependent events in mammals, but its contribution to peptide regulation during the ovulatory cycle is unclear. Melatonin was observed to inhibit basal oxytocin secretion from hypothalami collected during light hours ( p < 0.05). The investigation has, therefore, revealed the potential for melatonin to modulate peptide secretion from the hypothalamus during the day of pro-oestrus. We also observed that secretion from the hypothalamus of the two LH-regulating peptides, GnRH and oxytocin, are differently regulated during the day of pro-oestrus.

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