Abstract

We have previously demonstrated that the elevation in serum follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentration which is present during the late evening of proestrus in the rat is accompanied by an increase in the basal FSH release rate (anterior pituitary gland FSH release independent of the immediate presence of any hormones of nonanterior pituitary gland origin) which occurs during the late evening of proestrus. In the present study, a variety of treatments previously shown to block or block and restore FSH release during the late evening of proestrus were employed to determine if these experimentally induced changes in serum FSH levels could be explained on the basis of changes in the basal FSH release rate. Rats were decapitated at 1200 or 2400 h of proestrus and hemianterior pituitary glands were preincubated in medium 199 for 30 min. This was followed by a 2-h incubation and assay of the medium to determine the basal release rates of FSH and luteinizing hormone (LH). The FSH and LH concentration were determined in the other half of the gland and in the serum collected from trunk blood. Serum FSH concentrations and the basal FSH release rate increased from 1200 to 2400 h of proestrus in controls. Injection of phenobarbital at 1230 h of proestrus, of porcine follicular fluid during the morning and afternoon or the afternoon and the early evening of proestrus, or of anti-luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) serum at 1100 and 1400 h of proestrus suppressed these rises between 1200 and 2400 h of proestrus. In contrast, injection of anti-LHRJ-I serum at 2000 and 2300 h of proestrus was without effect on these rises between 1200 and 2400 h of proestrus. Injection of LHRH or of rat FSH at 1500 h of proestrus in phenobarbital-blocked rats, treatments previously shown to stimulate endogenous FSH release during the late evening of proestrus, restored elevated levels of FSH in the serum and increased the basal FSH release rate by 2400 h of proestrus. Serum FSH levels and the basal FSH release rate correlated (r=0.73 with 102 degrees of freedom; P<0.001), but there was no relationship between serum FSH levels or the basal FSH release rate and gland FSH stores. Serum LH concentrations were low in all groups when compared with levels observed in other rats at the peak of the preovulatory LH surge on the afternoon of proestrus. However, serum LH levels at 2400 h in controls were still higher (about 2-fold) than the presurge LH levels seen at 1200 h of Accepted July 12, 1982. Received July 20, 1981. 1This work was supported by grants from the NIH (HD-11011, HD-08333, HD-14032 and HD-07097). address: Dept. of Ob/Gyn and Reproductive Sciences, University of California Medical School, Third and Parnassus Ave., San Francisco, CA 94143. 3Reprint requests: Dr. Charles A. Blake, Dept. of Anatomy, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68105.

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