Abstract

A decrease in endogenous opioid peptide inhibitory tone on the afternoon of proestrus is one event underlying generation of the ovulatory luteinizing hormone (LH) surge. Whether this disinhibition involves a complete loss of opioid suppression at the time of the LH surge is controversial. The objective of the present study was to determine whether a total loss specifically of the κ-opioid inhibitory component suppressing LH secretion occurs on proestrus at the onset of the LH surge. Proestrous rats were infused intraventricularly with either artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) or aCSF containing nor-binaltorphimine (nor-BNI), a selective κ-opioid receptor antagonist, from 15:30 or 16:30 h (the approximate onset time of the spontaneous LH surge) to 18:50 h. The LH surge in rats treated with nor-BNI beginning at 15:30 h started 0.5 h earlier than the spontaneous surge in aCSF controls, and had significantly higher plasma LH levels from 16:30 to 17:30 h. Nor-BNI administration begun at 16:30 h also produced an LH surge with more elevated plasma LH levels at 17:30 and 18:00 h than in aCSF-treated controls. These results demonstrate that significant amounts of κ-opioid tone are still present during the hours when the LH surge is initiated. Thus, a complete loss of κ-opioid inhibition is not required for the onset of the LH surge on proestrus.

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