Abstract

The present study was planned to examine the effects of somatic growth on the determination of timing of puberty using Hatano high- and low-avoidance rats (HAAs and LAAs); the rats were genetically selected from Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats for good or poor performance in a two-way active avoidance-learning test. Since these two lines were found to have different characteristics, such as body weight at birth, maternal care and timing of male puberty, the present study characterized female puberty in Hatano rats and then compared postnatal growth and timing of puberty between the two lines of rats when they were nursed by foster SD dams. When nursed under biological dams, HAAs became heavier, exhibited vaginal opening at a younger age and first ovulation was accompanied by more oocytes than LAAs. In all of the HAAs, but none of the LAAs, ovulation was induced by a single s.c. injection of 5 IU equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG) on day 22 after birth. An additional treatment with 10 IU human CG revealed that, in the ovaries of LAAs, a small number of follicles had developed to an ovulable stage as a result of the treatment. The fostering improved somatic growth, and weights of LAAs were sustained at a heavier level than those of fostered HAAs. The fostering, however, did not eliminate the line difference in the timing of puberty of both sexes; it did accelerate the vaginal opening of LAAs but not the balanopreputial separation. Thus, there is a phenotypic difference in the timing of female puberty in Hatano rats exhibiting a different timing of ovarian development in response to gonadotropin. The present study indicates that postnatal somatic growth is not the predominant determinant in the onset of puberty in Hatano rats.

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