Abstract

To obtain further information on the mode of action of interleukin (IL)-1 in modulating gonadotropin secretion, a series of in vivo and in vitro studies has been performed with the β-isoform of IL-1. IL-1β injected in a lateral ventricle of 3-week-castrated female rats resulted in the expected decrease in serum levels of gonadotropins luteinizing hormone (LH), and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), accompanied by a decrease in the number of LH-releasing hormone (LHRH) receptors. These results may indicate that the inhibition of gonadotropin release may result from a decrease in the number of LHRH pituitary receptors either through a direct effect on the pituitary or by modulating the release of LHRH from hypothalamic neurons able to induce a reduction in pituitary LHRH receptors. In vitro studies using the GT1-1 cell line, which specifically produces and secretes LHRH, demonstrated that IL-β stimulates LHRH release but does not influence intracellular levels of LHRH mRNA. These results seem to indicate that IL-1β may act at several levels of the nervous machinery leading to gonadotropin secretion, with a series of effects more complex than previously anticipated.

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