1. The effect of the crude protein content (200 and 150 g/kg) of isoenergetic diets on episodic growth hormone (GH) release and on heat production was investigated in male broiler chickens. 2. Decreasing the crude protein content of isoenergetic diets from 200 g/kg (HP diet) to 150 g/kg (LP diet) resulted in depressed body weight gain, impaired food conversion efficiency and increased abdominal fat deposition. 3. The pattern of growth hormone secretion was markedly affected by dietary treatment. Broiler chickens fed on the LP diet had higher overall mean, amplitude, baseline and peak frequency than the HP chickens. 4. The LP chickens produced more heat per unit of metabolic body weight than the HP chickens. 5. The hypothesis relating the pattern of GH secretion to protein conversion efficiency was corroborated.
Annual changes in plasma of estradiol-17 beta, testosterone, and 17,20 beta-dihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one concentrations were measured, by radioimmunoassay, in female gudgeon Gobio gobio a fish which has an asynchronous-type ovary containing oocytes at various stages of development and spawns several times during the reproductive period. The gonadosomatic index and the relation between stages of maturity and steroid concentrations were also followed during the reproductive cycle. Plasma levels of estradiol-17 beta, testosterone, and 17,20 beta-dihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one were low from October to April and increased rapidly in May to reach 0.61 +/- 0.31; 2.3 +/- 0.42; and 3.17 +/- 0.68 ng/ml, respectively. Elevated levels were maintained during spawning when vitellogenic oocytes are present alongside oocytes in final maturation. Histological analysis of the ovary indicated that an important number of spawnings has occurred since the proportion of oocytes in final maturation stage was very low (less than 1%). Fish in the regressive phase also presented high steroid levels. The vitellogenic oocytes in preovulatory atresia and the postovulatory follicles may be responsible for these events.
The administration of either glucocorticoids (dexamethasone or corticosterone) or adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) to chicken embryos was followed by increase in the circulating concentration of triiodothyronine (T3), the T3 to thyroxine (T4) ratio and the activity of liver T4-5' monodeiodinase. No consistent changes in plasma concentrations of T4 or GH were observed. In post-hatching chicks, corticosterone and dexamethasone depressed the circulating concentrations of both T4 and T3. Iopanoc acid, an inhibitor of liver T4-5' monodeiodinase, elevated plasma concentrations of T4 and depressed those of T3 in both chicken embryos and young chicks. It is suggested that glucocorticoids affect circulating concentrations of T4 and T3 both by affecting the activity of the liver T4-5' monodeiodinase and by influencing the hypothalamo-pituitary axis.
Serum concentrations of arginine vasotocin (AVT), mesotocin and prolactin were determined by radioimmunoassay in Rhode Island Red chickens during and after dehydration, haemorrhage and oviposition. During dehydration increased circulating levels of AVT, mesotocin and prolactin were found. As water deprivation proceeded, marked differences were observed. After an initial rise in serum AVT, mesotocin and prolactin levels during mild and moderate dehydration, concentrations of both AVT and prolactin tended to normalize during continued water deprivation, while those of mesotocin remained high throughout the whole dehydration experiment with the highest at the end of the water-deprivation period. Removal of 5 ml blood at intervals of 10 min during six consecutive time-periods did not affect serum osmolality and circulating levels of AVT and prolactin, but slightly increased mesotocin. These results suggest an osmoregulatory role for AVT and prolactin, whereas mesotocin may be involved in volume control. Finally, 1 min after oviposition, control values of 19.5 +/- 3.4 pmol AVT/1 (n = 9) were raised more than sevenfold to 142.9 +/- 12.5 pmol/l (n = 11). Thereafter, a decline occurred with a half-life for AVT of 13 min with raised serum levels up to 31 min after oviposition. In contrast, the serum concentrations of mesotocin and prolactin remained unaffected by oviposition.
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