Abstract

Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) degrading activity may be of physiological significance as a mechanism capable of partial regulation of hypothalamic LHRH release as well as LHRH levels at the gonadotroph. The possibility of cyclic fluctuations in LHRH-degrading activity was investigated in female rat hypothalami and pituitaries. These tissues were collected at selected time points during the 4-day estrous cycle, homogenized, and centrifuged at 100,000 g. Supernatants were incubated with synthetic LHRH, the reactions terminated, and the decapeptide and its products separated by high-performance liquid chromatography. Degradation of LHRH incubated with active cytosol was estimated by comparison of integrated LHRH peak area with that from incubations with heat-inactivated cytosol. Hypothalamic LHRH degradation was depressed during the latter hours of diestrus 2, a time during which the LHRH content in the hypothalamus has been reported to be increasing. From diestrus 24.00 h to proestrus 15.00 h, there was a significant increase in degrading activity. This was then followed by a decline from 15.00 to 18.00 h proestrus; at the time of the LH surge, the activity had not undergone significant increase in comparison to 18.00 h. Pituitary LHRH degradation was significantly increased during the 6-hour period preceding the surge, but was significantly depressed at the surge. The hypothalamic reduction in activity associated with diestrus 2 as well as the hypothalamic and pituitary reductions associated with proestrus may represent a permissive effect allowing increased LHRH accumulation in the hypothalamus and its prolonged action in the pituitary.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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