Abstract

The pulsatile release of GnRH and LH secretion is essential for fertility in all mammals. Pulses of LH occur approximately every hour in follicular-phase females and every 2 to 3 hours in luteal-phase females and males. Many studies over the last 50 years have sought to identify the nature and mechanism of the "GnRH pulse generator" responsible for pulsatile LH release. This review examines the characteristics of pulsatile hormone release and summarizes investigations that have led to our present understanding of the GnRH pulse generator. There is presently little compelling evidence for an intrinsic mechanism of pulse generation involving interactions between GnRH neuron cell bodies. Rather, data support the presence of an extrinsic pulse generator located within the arcuate nucleus, and attention has focused on the kisspeptin neurons and their projections to GnRH neuron dendrons concentrated around the median eminence. Sufficient evidence has been gathered in rodents to conclude that a subpopulation of arcuate kisspeptin neurons is, indeed, the GnRH pulse generator. Findings in other species are generally compatible with this view and suggest that arcuate/infundibular kisspeptin neurons represent the mammalian GnRH pulse generator. With hindsight, it is likely that past arcuate nucleus multiunit activity recordings have been from kisspeptin neurons. Despite advances in identifying the cells forming the pulse generator, almost nothing is known about their mechanisms of synchronicity and the afferent hormonal and transmitter modulation required to establish the normal patterns of LH pulsatility in mammals.

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