Abstract

Abstract Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common hormonal disorder in females of reproductive age. Hypersecretion of luteinizing hormone (LH), partly due to increased pituitary sensitivity to gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH), is a significant cause of infertility in women with PCOS. Moreover, obesity amplifies the severity of reproductive dysfunction in PCOS. In sheep, testosterone (T) excess during gestational days (GD) 30 to 90 results in GnRH-mediated LH hypersecretion and recapitulates the PCOS phenotype. This study investigated 1) if mid-gestation (GD 60 to 90) is the susceptibility window for programming pituitary hypersensitivity to GnRH, and 2) the contribution of postnatal obesity in modulating LH responsiveness to GnRH. Suffolk ewes received T propionate (T; 100 mg i.m.) or corn oil (C; vehicle) twice weekly from GD 60 to 90 (term = 147 d). At 5 mo of age, T lambs were assigned randomly to either a maintenance (100% of NRC requirements) or overfed diet (130% of NRC requirements), and Control lambs were fed the maintenance diet. During the anestrous period (late summer), ewes (n = 8/group; ~17 mo of age) received a GnRH bolus injection (2 ng/kg) intravenously every 1.5 h and blood samples were collected at 15-min intervals for a 6-h period. Despite animals being in seasonal anestrous, few endogenous LH pulses were evident during the 6 h-sampling period. To avoid confounding, only clear responses to GnRH challenge that occurred within 15 to 45 min after each GnRH injection were considered for further analyses. Mean number of exogenous GnRH-induced LH responses that met these criteria did not differ between groups and averaged 1.81 ± 0.27 pulses/animal. The parameters of these GnRH-induced responses were analyzed as one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s HSD post-hoc analysis. Mean LH pulse peak was greater (P < 0.05) in T overfed ewes (4.59 ± 0.49 ng/mL) compared with T maintenance (2.19 ± 0.61 ng/mL) and Control ewes (2.58 ± 0.53 ng/mL). Additionally, amplitude of LH pulses was greater (P < 0.05) in T overfed ewes (2.66 ± 0.39 ng/mL) compared with T maintenance (1.03 ± 0.48 ng/mL) and tended (P = 0.089) to be greater in T overfed compared with Control ewes (1.41 ± 0.42 ng/mL). LH pulse peak and amplitude in T maintenance did not differ from Control ewes. In conclusion, failure of GD 60 to 90 T treatment to increase GnRH responsiveness as opposed to our earlier finding of increased responsiveness in GD 30 to 90 T-treaded sheep indicates that the susceptibility window for programming pituitary hypersensitivity to GnRH lies between GD 30 to 60. Postnatal obesity may act as an independent activational signal in amplifying the pituitary sensitivity to GnRH in female sheep. This premise is supported by observations that obesity exacerbates pituitary-mediated LH hypersecretion in women with PCOS. Research support: NIH-NICHD (R01HD099096).

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