Changes in serum and pituitary LH and FSH concentrations have been measured in the newborn male rat before, during, and up to 24 h after birth. A sudden and transient increase of serum and pituitary gonadotropins is observed at birth, which is followed by a rapid increase of absolute and relative testicular weights between 2--12 h (P less than 0.0001) and by a transient increase of serum testosterone between 0 h in utero (810 +/- 26 pg/ml) and 2 h (2820 +/- 318 pg/ml; P less than 0.0001). Similarly, premature newborn rats obtained by cesarian delivery on day 20 of gestation also exhibited an increase in testicular weight between 0--6 h and an increase in serum testosterone levels between 0 h (730 +/- 170 pg/ml) and 2 h (3400 +/- 300 pg/ml; P less than 0.001) with only a slight increase in serum LH. These results show that the hypophyseo-testicular axis of the rats is stimulated at the moment of birth. The factors responsible for this stimulation are discussed. This transient testicular crisis occurring at birth could affect the process of masculinization of the central nervous system of the rat.
Substance P (SP) is known to act on pituitary hormone release either at the hypothalamic level or directly at the pituitary level. In order to investigate whether SP is present in the pituitary gland and to localize the peptide at the cellular and subcellular levels, the immunocytological method was used. Rat pituitaries were fixed and frozen. Ultrathin sections, obtained by cryoultramicrotomy, were incubated with anti-SP serum. The antigen-antibody reaction was detected by 4-chloro-1-naphtol. SP immunoreactivity was observed both in the prolactin and in the gonadotropic cells, but not in the somatotropic, corticotropic and thyrotropic cells. In reactive cells, SP immunoreactivity was observed in the secretory granules, in the cytoplasm, and in the nucleus distributed all over the euchromatin near to the heterochromatin regions. No immunoreactivity was observed when nonimmune serum or anti-SP serum incubated with SP was used. No modification of the immunocytochemical reaction was observed when anti-SP serum incubated with somatostatin, gonado- or thyroliberin was used. These data (1) provide immunocytological evidence for the presence of SP in the pituitary gland; (2) indicate the presence of SP peptide in the gonadotropic and prolactin cells only. They support previous findings indicating that SP could have a direct effect at the pituitary level.
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