Changes in the size and position of secretory granules in pituitary gonadotrophs have been studied in relationship to LH release and self-priming induced by LH-releasing hormone (LHRH) in pituitary glands from normal and hypogonadal (hpg) female mice. Hemipituitary glands were preincubated and then incubated for either 1 or 2 h in the absence or presence of LHRH (8.5 nmol/l). The glands were either processed for ultrastructural morphometry or homogenized for the determination of pituitary LH content. Morphometry was carried out on gonadotrophs identified by immunocytochemistry for LH beta using the thin/semi-thin section method. Pituitary LH content and the amount of LH released were determined by radioimmunoassay. The amount of LH released in response to the first and second hours of incubation with LHRH were similar in hpg and normal mice with a clear priming effect (three- to fourfold increase in pituitary responsiveness to LHRH) occurring in both strains. Despite a substantially reduced total number of granules (and amount of LH) in unstimulated hpg gonadotrophs, the number of granules in the outer 500 nm marginal zone of the cells was similar to that in normal mice. This could explain the similar amount of LH released from normal and hpg glands by the first LHRH challenge. The initial exposure to LHRH was also associated with a marked translocation of secretory granules from the central to the outer marginal region of cytoplasm subjacent to the gonadotroph plasmalemma, such that in 'primed' glands 60% of granules were found in this marginal zone compared with 40% (hpg) or 33% (normal) in unstimulated glands. The mean diameter of granules in the marginal zone was significantly less than that of granules in the central zone of the gonadotrophs of unstimulated glands from both normal and hpg animals. Exposure to LHRH for 1 h was associated with an increase in the number of small granules in the marginal zone and a significant decrease in the mean diameter of the gonadotroph granule population as a whole. After the primed release of LH, increased proportions of granules were still located in the marginal zone of gonadotrophs, indicating that granule migration continued during the second hour of exposure to LHRH in which primed release occurred. The primed release was associated with a detectable reduction in both the LH and granule content of gonadotrophs in normal, but not hpg glands.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
The corpus luteum (CL) is an important endocrine organ in the menstrual cycle and in pregnancy. The regulation of its hormonal production has been extensively studied. The steroidogenic abilities of the CL can be rescued by human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) but its role in the maintenance of CL function is not clear. We will discuss the hypothesis that there are fetoplacental factors, other than HCG, that modulate CL steroidogenesis.
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