Abstract

This study in the female lamb determined if photoperiod influences pulsatile LH secretion before puberty. Moreover, we reevaluated the hypothesis that the photoperiod-modulated decrease in responsiveness to ovarian steroid inhibition which results in increased pulsatile LH secretion during sexual maturation reflects an increase in direct central nervous system 'drive' of gonadotropin secretion. The experimental approach was to monitor pulsatile LH secretion in the presence and absence of estradiol negative feedback during development in the same individuals. This was accomplished by the periodic replacement and removal of constant-release estradiol capsules every 3 weeks in ovariectomized lambs (OVX) which were raised in photoperiods that delay or permit normal puberty. A new algorithm was used for identification of episodes of LH secretion. In OVX lambs in the permissive sequence of photoperiods (long days of 16L:8D until 18 weeks of age, followed by short days of 8L:16D), LH pulse frequency was low in the presence of estradiol early in life at 9 weeks of age, but increased at later ages. LH pulse frequency in the presence of estradiol feedback was not associated with that in the absence of estradiol replacement. LH pulse frequency was high throughout development in the absence of estradiol and increased further at the time when responsiveness to estradiol negative feedback decreased. In lambs raised in the inhibitory sequence of photoperiods (short days until 18 weeks of age followed by long days), LH pulse frequency in the presence of estradiol remained low throughout the duration of the experiment, but in the absence of estradiol, LH pulse frequency increased with age.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call