Intact and castrated juvenile male rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) were treated with testosterone and gonadotropic hormone (GTH) to determine the maturational effects of these hormones on the GTH-cells. Electron-microscopic studies of the GTH-cells revealed that GTH and testosterone in intact animals, and testosterone in castrated fish, caused GTH-cell maturation: These cells now displayed the same appearance as GTH-cells in adult trout, including the presence of globules, a well-developed Golgi apparatus and rough endoplasmic reticulum, all of which were absent in GTH-cells of control animals. Animals with stimulated GTH-cells also had an increased GTH content of the pituitary; release of GTH could not be demonstrated. Animals treated with GTH exhibited an accelerated development of the testes, resulting in complete gametogenesis and elevated plasma testosterone levels. These results indicate that exogenous steroids as well as endogenous gonadal steroids can stimulate the full development of GTH-cells and accelerate GTH synthesis. The significance of this stimulating effect of the gonadal hormones with respect to the development of the brain-pituitary-gonadal axis and the onset of puberty is discussed.
Under hatchery conditions the reproduction of the African catfish depends on artificial induction of egg maturation and ovulation. In this study the effect of a number of potential psychotropic drugs with variable ~ti-dopamine and/or ~ti-~ro~nin properties in combination with LHRHa on gonadotropin release and ovulation was investigated.Drugs with a potent ~ti-dopaminer~c character caused a preovulatory go~dotropin surge, which seems to be independent of their anti-serotonergic properties. One drug, however, did not follow this rule. Drugs exhibiting low interaction with dopamine and high interaction with serotonin receptors had no effect on the LHRHa-induced gonadotropin release.
Pituitary glands from 6-month-old sexually immature female rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri, were kept in organ culture for 48 or 72 h. Certain groups of pituitaries were cultivated for 48 h on either control medium or medium with 17 alpha-methyltestosterone (MT), or with estradiol-17 beta (E2) in concentrations of 8.5 X 10(-7) M. Other groups of pituitaries were cultivated for 72 h on control medium, or for 48 h on either control medium or MT-medium or E2-medium, and subsequently for 24 h on medium with synthetic LHRH in concentrations of 8.5 X 10(-7) M and 8.5 X 10(-10) M. Gonadotropic (GTH) cells are identified by Alcian Blue-Periodic Acid Schiff-Orange G staining and the double-antibody immunoenzyme-cytochemical technique using anti-carp beta GTH as the first antibody. A quantitative histological procedure was used to study the nuclear size of the GTH cells in response to the different hormones. Secretory activity was estimated by measuring the gonadotropin (GTH) content in extracts of pituitaries, plasma, and the culture media every 24 h by radioimmunoassay. Cultivation on MT- or E2-enriched medium results in an increase of the total amount of GTH in the pituitary and medium, an accumulation of GTH in GTH-cells (approximately 20 percentage points) and an increase in their nuclear size, indicating a stimulation of GTH synthesis. However, autonomous GTH-release is not affected by these steroids. Subsequent cultivation of the pituitaries for 24 h with LHRH causes stimulation of GTH synthesis (approximately 20 percentage points). Preincubation with steroids increases the GTH synthesis capacity of LHRH only when used in a concentration of 8.5 X 10(-10) M. Moreover, 8.5 X 10(-7) M LHRH causes a stimulation of GTH-release. Preincubation of the pituitaries with steroids increases the responsiveness of GTH-cells to LHRH. It is concluded that GTH-production in pituitaries of immature female rainbow trout can be directly influenced by gonadal steroids and by a hypophysiotropic substance.
Inhibin was partially purified from bovine follicular fluid using chromatography on immobilized Procion Red 3B and anion-exchange chromatography. Ovariectomized Texel ewes were immunized against the inhibin-containing fraction from the Procion Red 3B column and the immune response was subsequently boosted with similar fractions or with the preparation obtained from the anion-exchange column. The potencies of the resulting antisera were evaluated in an in-vitro bioassay system for estimating inhibin activity, using dispersed rat pituitary cells. The antisera were found to inhibit the bioactivity of inhibin preparations from ovarian follicular fluid of bovine, porcine, ovine or human origin, as well as inhibin activity in ovine testicular lymph and rete testis fluid, in culture media from rat granulosa and rat Sertoli cells and in homogenates of rat ovaries and testes. These results indicate that the inhibin molecules from several species contain a common bioactive moiety. The results also showed that the antiserum was more effective in neutralizing inhibin activity from ovarian than from testicular sources in both sheep and rat, indicating a sex-related difference in the inhibin molecules within a species.
Effects of steroids on the accumulation of glycoprotein gonadotropin (GTH) in pituitaries of juvenile trout were investigated by means of scanning cytophotometry applied to immunocytochemical preparations, and with the use of a radioimmunoassay. Effects on other aspects of GTH-cell activity were analyzed by measuring the size of the gonadotrops and their nuclei. Progesterone added to aquarium water and methyltestosterone incorporated into the food showed a pronounced stimulatory effect on the accumulation of GTH. To a lesser extent, treatment with cortisol, cortisone, and desoxycorticosterone acetate administered to aquarium water, and 11 beta-hydroxy-androstenedione added to the food resulted in an increase of the hypophysial content of GTH. Steroids stimulating the accumulation of GTH in the pituitary also exhibited a positive effect on GTH-cell activity as indicated by an increase in the size of gonadotropic cells. Progesterone incorporated into the food did not influence the GTH-content and the GTH-cell activity. It is suggested that the route of administration of an exogenous steroid is essential for its effect on GTH cells in trout. Comparison of GTH values reveals an excellent correlation between the data from the radioimmunoassay and those from the corresponding densitometric measurements. No correlation was observed between values of morphometrically determined GTH-cell activity and the densitometric values reflecting hypophysial GTH content.
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