A defect in the structure of the obese gene is responsible for development of obesity in the ob͞ob mouse. The product of expression of the gene is the protein hormone leptin. Leptin causes weight loss in ob͞ob and normal mice, it is secreted by adipocytes, and it is an important controller of the size of fat stores by inhibiting appetite. The ob͞ob mouse is infertile and has a pattern of gonadotropin secretion similar to that of prepubertal animals. Consequently, we hypothesized that leptin might play a role in the control of gonadotropin secretion and initiated studies on its possible acute effects on hypothalamic-pituitary function. After a preincubation period, hemi-anterior pituitaries of adult male rats were incubated with leptin for 3 hr. Leptin produced a dose-related increase in follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) release, which reached peaks with 10 ؊9 and 10 ؊11 M leptin, respectively. Gonadotropin release decreased at higher concentrations of leptin to values indistinguishable from that of control pituitaries. On the other hand, prolactin secretion was greatly increased in a dose-related manner but only with leptin concentrations (10 ؊7 -10 ؊5 M). Incubation with leptin of median eminence-arcuate nuclear explants from the same animals produced significant increases in LH-releasing hormone (LHRH) release only at the lowest concentrations tested (10 ؊12 -10 ؊10 M). As the leptin concentration was increased, LHRH release decreased and was significantly less than control release at the highest concentration tested (10 ؊6 M). To determine if leptin can also release gonadotropins in vivo, ovariectomized females bearing implanted third ventricle cannulae were injected with 10 g of estradiol benzoate s.c., followed 72 hr later by microinjection into the third ventricle of leptin (0.6 nmol in 5 l) or an equal volume of diluent. There was a highly significant increase in plasma LH, which peaked 10-50 min after injection of leptin. Leptin had no effect on plasma FSH concentrations, and the diluent had no effect on either plasma FSH or LH. Thus, leptin at very low concentrations stimulated LHRH release from hypothalamic explants and FSH and LH release from anterior pituitaries of adult male rats in vitro and released LH, but not FSH, in vivo. The results indicate that leptin plays an important role in controlling gonadotropin secretion by stimulatory hypothalamic and pituitary actions.
Previous studies indicated that there is a separate hypothalamic control of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) release distinct from that of luteinizing hormone (LH). An FSH-releasing factor (FSHRF) was purified from rat and sheep hypothalami, but has not been isolated. We hypothesized that FSHRF might be an analogue of mammalian luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (m-LHRH) and evaluated the activity of many analogues of m-LHRH and of the known LHRHs found in lower forms. Here we demonstrate that lamprey (l) LHRH-III has a potent, dose-related FSH-but not LH-releasing action on incubated hemipituitaries of male rats. l-LHRH-I on the other hand, had little activity to release either FSH or LH. m-LHRH was equipotent to l-LHRH-III to release FSH, but also had a high potency to release LH in contrast to l-LHRH-III that selectively released FSH. Chicken LHRH-II had considerable potency to release both LH and FSH, but no selectivity in its action. Salmon LHRH had much less potency than the others tested, except for l-LHRH-I, and no selectivity in its action. Because ovariectomized, estrogen, progesterone-treated rats are a sensitive in vivo assay for FSHand LH-releasing activity, we evaluated l-LHRH-III in this assay and found that it had a completely selective stimulatory effect on FSH release at the two doses tested (10 and 100 pmols). Therefore, l-LHRH-III is a highly potent and specific FSH-releasing peptide that may enhance fertility in animals and humans. It may be the long sought after m-FSHRF.Although the evidence from physiological studies for a separate hypothalamic control of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) release distinct from that of luteinizing hormone (LH) is compelling (1-5), proof of the separate hypothalamic control of FSH rests on the identification of an FSH-releasing factor (FSHRF). Crude extracts of the organum vasculosum lamina terminalis contained much more FSH-releasing activity than accounted for by the content of LH-releasing hormone (LHRH), and the slope of the dose-response curve in the in vitro bioassay for FSH release was much steeper than that obtained with LHRH (6). Extracts of the posterior median eminence similarly contained more FSH-releasing activity than could be accounted for by the content of LHRH (7).FSHRF was purified originally from sheep hypothalami by gel filtration on Sephadex G-25 followed by carboxymethyl cellulose chromatography (2, 3). The release of FSH was measured by bioassay using either in vivo or in vitro assays of FSH-releasing activity (2, 3). Because LHRH has intrinsic FSH-releasing activity (8) and because Schally et al. could not separate FSH-from LH-releasing activity by fractionation on Sephadex G-25 using in vitro assays and measurement of FSH by immunoassay, they concluded that there was only one gonadotropin-releasing hormone (9).Lumpkin et al. (10) separated the FSH-from the LHreleasing activity on the same column of Sephadex G-25 used originally (2) with bioassay of the activity in vivo in the ovariectomized (OVX), estrogen-progesterone-...
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