Using heterologous radioimmunoassay systems, it has been possible to demonstrate a complete cross-reaction between partially purified preparations of guinea pig FSH and LH and the corresponding rat gonadotrophìns. On this basis, radioimmuno-assays for these 2 gonadotrophìns have been established and they have been used in order to study changes in blood hormonal levels during the estrous cycle. There is a serum LH peak during estrus shortly before ovulation. At ovulation, serum LH levels show a smaller increase which is maintained for 1 or 2 days. The changes in serum FSH levels do not systematically coincide with those of LH. A parallel study of the changes in serum progesterone and estradiol was also performed. The levels of estrogen increased during the pre-ovulatory period, reaching a maximum shortly before the pre-ovulatory LH peak. Progesterone does not increase until shortly thereafter.
Apomorphine challenge tests (0.5 mg SC) were performed in 14 normal male volunteers and in 9 male schizophrenic inpatients, drug-free for at least 2 wk. In the normal volunteers, apomorphine induced an increase of serum growth hormone (GH) (maximum at 40 min), of vasopressin-neurophysin (hNpI) (maximum at 20 min), and oxytocin-neurophysin (hNpII) (maximum at 20 min). The release of neurophysins was independent of digestive side effects. In the schizophrenics, the GH level and release pattern were similar to those in the controls. The basal level of hNpI was reduced (t0: 0.42 +/- 0.1 ng/ml in the schizophrenics and 0.66 +/- 0.05 ng/ml in the controls, p < 0.02). In contrast, the basal level of hNpII was increased (3.34 +/- 0.04 ng/ml in the schizophrenics to 0.92 +/- 0.21 ng/ml in the controls, p = 0.001). The response to apomorphine was blunted, with no significant release of hNpI or of hNpII. Although the hNpII data are consistent with an increased dopaminergic tone, the psychopathological meaning of the increased basal oxytocinergic and decreased vasopressinergic functions remains to be defined.
The levels of prolactin, FSH, LH, oestradiol and progesterone were measured daily during fourteen ovulatory cycles. The behaviour of FSH, LH, oestradiol and progesterone was classical. Non-systematic changes occurred in prolactin levels during the course of the menstrual cycle with the highest level being either during the ovulatory period or during the luteal phase. However, the mean level of prolactin was significantly higher during the ovulatory and luteal phases than during the follicular phase. A direct relationship between oestradiol and prolactin levels was noted, although there was no correlation between prolactin on the one hand and FSH, LH and progesterone on the other.
Four Romney ewes were actively immunized with a partially purified preparation of inhibin derived from bovine follicular fluid and their ovulation rates in four successive oestrous cycles were compared with those of four ewes receiving adjuvant alone. The ovulation rates of the ewes immunized with the inhibin preparation were significantly higher than those of the control ewes (2.06 +/- 0.16 (S.E.M.) vs 1.31 +/- 0.06 ovulations/ewe, n = 4). Plasma concentrations of FSH and LH, measured in blood samples taken three times a week for 11 weeks, during which time each ewe was immunized three times, were not significantly different between the two treatment groups. These results suggest that active immunization with inhibin-enriched follicular fluid may be a potential means of increasing fecundity in sheep.
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