Biology of reproduction
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Biology of reproduction · Aug 1996
Direct actions of the luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonist, deslorelin, on anterior pituitary contents of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), LH and FSH subunit messenger ribonucleic acid, and plasma concentrations of LH and FSH in castrated male cattle.
The objective in this study was to characterize direct effects of the LHRH agonist, deslorelin, on anterior pituitary gland function in male cattle in the absence of gonadal feedback. Castrated bulls (steers), 30 mo old, were allocated to four groups: group 1, control, no treatment (n = 8); group 2, five deslorelin implants (approximately 250 micrograms total deslorelin/day) for 42 days (n = 8); group 3, control+ LHRH (50 micrograms i.m.) at weekly intervals (n = 3); group 4, five deslorelin implants+LHRH as for group 3 (n = 3). Plasma LH was similar (p > 0.05) for steers in groups 1 and 2 on Day 0 and lower (p < 0.05) for steers in group 2 on Day 4, and continued to decrease to Day 41 (group 1, 1.71 +/- 0.20 ng/ml [mean +/- SEM]; group 2, 0.38 +/- 0.03 ng/ml [p < 0.001]). ⋯ In summary, steers treated with deslorelin showed desensitization to natural LHRH, and this was associated with reduced pituitary contents of LH and FSH beta-subunit mRNAs, a reduction in pituitary content of LH, and decreases in plasma concentrations of LH and FSH. This demonstrated, for the first time, a direct action of LHRH agonist on LH and FSH beta-subunit gene expression in cattle, independent of gonadal feedback. Also, there was a differential effect of treatment with deslorelin on gonadotropin alpha- and beta-subunit mRNA contents in the anterior pituitary.