Abstract

Previous data suggest that developmental increases in peripheral concentrations of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) may be one of several neuroendocrine signals that regulate the timing of puberty. In order to test this hypothesis further, normal juvenile female rhesus monkeys (Con; n = 6) were compared with age-matched animals (Igf; n = 4) which received a constant subcutaneous infusion of recombinant human IGF-I (110 micrograms/kg/day) from 18 through 36 months of age. Menstrual bleeding was monitored and ovulation was inferred from a sustained rise in serum progesterone. In order to assess the sensitivity of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) neurons to excitation, the response of serum LH to the acute administration of the glutamate receptor agonist N-methyl-D, L-aspartic acid (NMDA) was assessed prior to menarche, 2 months following menarche, and during the follicular phase of a female's third ovulation or 50 days after a female's first ovulation. In addition, the pituitary response of LH secretion to an LHRH agonist was assessed during the follicular phase of a female's fourth ovulation or 75 days following her first ovulation. IGF-I treatment effectively elevated serum concentrations by more than 86% of the values observed in Con animals. Although the treatment also enhanced the developmental increase in IGF binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3), IGF-I was increased proportionately more, resulting in a significantly higher molar ratio of IGF-I:IGFBP-3 in treated females throughout the course of the study. Treatment with IGF-I did not affect age at menarche but did significantly advance the age of first ovulation. Consequently, the interval between menarche and first ovulation was significantly shorter in Igf compared with Con females. Although the total number of ovulations exhibited by Igf (3.8 +/- 0.3) and Con females (3.0 +/- 0.5) in the 12 months following menarche was similar, significantly more of these were characterized by normal luteal phase progesterone secretion in Igf (100% +/- 0) compared with Con females (64% +/- 17). An analysis of cycles with a normal luteal phase revealed that serum estradiol during the luteal phase was significantly higher in Igf compared with Con females. Finally, IGF-treated females responded to NMDA treatment with a significantly greater increase in serum LH following menarche but not prior to menarche. In contrast, the response of serum LH to an LHRH agonist did not differ between Igf and Con females. These data suggest that the premature elevation in IGF-I levels, and consequently the ratio of IGF-I:IGFBP-3, accelerates the tempo of the final stages of puberty in rhesus monkeys. This action of IGF-I is probably the result of an increase in LHRH neuronal activity and is not due to a change in pituitary sensitivity to LHRH stimulation. In addition, ovarian sensitivity to LH stimulation during the luteal phase is also increased by IGF-I. Taken together, these data suggest that developmental increases in peripheral IGF-I secretion participate in the neuroendocrine regulation of puberty in female primates.

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