The direct role of estradiol and progesterone in sensitizing the adenohypophysis to the releasing action of LHRH (luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone) has been examined in rats bearing pituitary homografts. Groups (10-14/group) of virgin female rats (CDF) strain) were hypophysectomized, ovariectomized, and pituitaries obtained from long-term ovariectomized donors were implanted under the kidney capsule. The animals were treated on the sixth day after transplantation with sesame oil vehicle, estradiol (1.6 mug/100 g BW), progesterone (0.6 mg/100 g BW), or estradiol plus progesterone. This injection regimen was repeated 12 h later. Ninety minutes after the steroid injection on day 7 half of the animals in each group received LHRH (ip) and half received saline. Basal levels of LH in the steroid-treated groups not injected with LHRH were, in general, elevated as compared to the oil-injected group. Following LHRH, blood samples were collected by cardiac puncture under light ether anesthesia at 5, 15, 30, 60, and 90 min postinjection. Animals receiving LHRH responded with significant elevations of LH both in the presence and absence of steroids while saline was without effect. However, the magnitude of the LH peak was found to be significantly blunted by estrogen treatment. Moreover, the peak LH response to LHRH occurred 30 min following injection in all groups except the progesterone primed animals. In this group the peak LH was delayed by 30 min. These results suggest that estradiol directly inhibits the release of LH at the level of the pituitary and that the ovarian steroids, estradiol and progesterone probably interact to determine the time of optimal pituitary sensitivity to LHRH.
Effects of suckling on the structure of mammotrophs and the release of prolactin, were studied in rats on the 10th day of lactation with the use of electron microscopy and radioimmunoassay techniques. Nursing animals were separated from their young for 8 hr and subsequently united and permitted to nurse for 1, 5, 15, 30 min; or 1, 2 and 4 hr. Blood samples were obtained prior to and throughout the suckling interval and pituitary glands were processed for electron microscopy. Control animals consisted of normal lactating females and animals separated from their young for 8 hr. Normally lactating controls had high prolactin serum levels (501 +/- 95 ng/ml) and synthetically active appearing mammotrophs. An 8 hr separation from the pups induced a dramatic lowering of serum prolactin (32 +/- 5 ng/ml), an increase in secretory granule storage, and a great dilation of rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) cisternae. Five min of renewed suckling resulted in a rise of plasma prolactin levels (605 +/- 183 ng/ml) which remained high thereafter. The major ultrastructural changes observed during the first 30 min of suckling were as follows: 1) at 1 min, the RER became cmone?); 2) AT 5 MIN, AND MUCH MORE OBVIOUSLY AT 15 AND 30 MIn, a massive discharge of secretory granules was observed; and 3) at 15 min, the collapsed RER underwent transformation for 1,2 and 4 hr) induced new hormone synthesis as suggested by the presence of hypertrophied Golgi elements and numerous immature granules. This was accompanied by a new transformation of the RER from the vesicular into a lamellar form now consisting of very slender cisternae lined with numerous ribosomes, presumably involved in the renewal of the synthetic process. The morphologic findings described correlate well with the time table of prolactin release. In addition, the dramatic early changes in the structure of the RER suggest a possible involvement of this organelle in the storage and release of a proposed rapidly releasable pool of prolactin.
The ultrastructure of the pineal organ was studied in the tropical megachiropteran Rousettus leschenaulti. The pineal lies deep beneath the hemispheres adjacent to the third ventricle and is traversed by the habenular commissure anteriorly. Its parenchyma consists of a uniform population of light and occasional dark pinealocytes which appear to differ only in the degree of cytoplasmic staining. Pinealocytes are characterized by well developed Golgi bodies associated with numerous small vesicles, many mitochondria and polyribosomes, and frequent subsurface cisternae. Lipid droplets and elements of smooth endoplasmic reticulum are scant. Cisternae of granular endoplasmic reticulum are occasionally dilated. A distinct feature is the abundance of clear vesicles in the pinealocyte pericapiUary terminals, which also frequently contain granular vesicles and a very large vacuole. The pineal is further characterized by the presence of a small number of glial cells and myelinated nerve fibers. A broad perivascular space investing numerous capillaries contains glial-cell and pinealocyte processes, collagen fibrils and abundant unmyelinated nerve fibers. Tortuous extensions of the perivascular space enter the pineal parenchyma where they come in close roximity to branched intercellular channels or canaliculi characterized by specialized junctions and microvilli. Differences between the pineal of the non-hibernating megachiropteran Rousettus and that of the hibernating microchiropteran bats, and structural similarities to the pineal of tropical rodents are discussed.
The role of the pineal in regulating the oncogenic processes was explored in Sprague-Dawley female rats by comparing incidence and growth of mammary tumors in animals subjected to superior cervical ganglionectomy (SCGx) or blinding and anosmia (BAs) with that of intact rats treated with 7-12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (DMBA). The surgery was performed at the age of 56 days, 1 day following the administration of the carcinogen. Growth of mammary tumors was studied, and 15 weeks later the rats were sacrificed by decapitation and the activity of the pineal hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) was determined. Carcinostatic effects of similar magnitude were present in both SCGx and BAs groups as evident from tendency toward reduced tumor incidence and decreased total tumor mass. Ganglionectomized rats developed significantly smaller numbers of tumors than intact control animals. A trend toward reduced tumor number and increased tumor regression was evident in the BAs group. Although there was no significant difference in tumor volumes among the groups, BAs animals showed a distinct trend toward smaller tumor volumes at the termination of the experiment. Despite similar carcinostatic tendencies, SCGx rats had significantly lower HIOMT activity than BAs animals. The possible existence of multiple carcinostatic mechanisms in BAs and SCGx rats is discussed.
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