FEEDBACK EFFECT OF OESTROGEN ON LUTEINIZING HORMONE SECRETION BY THE RAT PITUITARY GLAND

Abstract
Ovariectomized rats with neural deafferentation at the level of the posterior border of the anterior hypothalamic area (AC rats) were used to re-evaluate the direct feedback effect of oestrogen on the regulation of LH secretion by the pituitary gland. Synthetic LH releasing hormone (LH-RH; 300 ng/kg), injected at 30-min intervals into AC rats with undetectable basal LH, induced pulsatile increase of serum LH concentrations. Oestradiol-17β (5 μg), administered i.v. just before the first LH-RH injection, significantly decreased the LH response to a second injection of LH-RH given 30 min later and to subsequent injections. Maximal inhibition was 58%. Oestradiol-17β (5 μg) given i.v. to control ovariectomized rats decreased serum LH concentrations 40 min after administration; the maximum reduction being 52%. An s.c. injection of oestradiol benzoate (5 μg) increased pituitary responsiveness to LH-RH by the next day in AC rats but decreased serum LH levels in control ovariectomized rats. These results indicate that acute inhibitory and chronic facilitatory effects of oestrogen on LH secretion are exerted at the pituitary gland, without a change in LH-RH secretion. The prolonged inhibitory effect of oestrogen is at the level of the hypothalamus and causes a reduction in LH-RH secretion.