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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 24, 771-777, Copyright © 1981 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
1 Department of Physiology,
University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine,
San Francisco, California 94143 The present experiments were carried out to characterize LH release during periods of low level
LH secretion in the rat 4-day estrous cycle. Unanesthetized animals with jugular cannulae were
bled on the morning (0930-1230 h) or afternoon (1330-1630 h) of either estrus, diestrus 1 (i.e.,
metestrus), or diestrus 2, or on proestrus morning (75 µl whole blood/6 min). The percent coefficients of variation obtained for alterations in blood LH levels during the morning or afternoon of
each of the four stages of the estrous cycle, or when morning and afternoon values for each cycle
stage were combined, were all significantly greater than intra-assay variation, indicating that LH release was pulsatile during each stage of the cycle. No significant morning vs afternoon differences
in mean blood LH levels, LH pulse amplitude, or pulse frequency existed in any cycle stage. As the
cycle progressed, changes occurred in mean blood LH levels which were due to changes in the
characteristics of pulsatile LH secretion on each day of the cycle. On estrus, blood LH levels are
the lowest of the entire cycle due to the occurrence of the slowest frequency of pulsatile release in
the cycle (1 pulse/2 h). On the next day, diestrus 1, blood LH levels are elevated, and are the highest of all the periods of low level LH release in the cycle. This increase in blood LH levels from
estrus to diestrus 1 is due to a marked increase in LH pulse amplitude (15 vs 38 ng/ml) as well as a
shortening of the LH interpulse interval to 60 min. While this circhoral rhythm remained the same
through diestrus 2 (55 min) and proestrus morning (63 min), the LH pulse amplitude decreased on
these days to 20 and 16 ng/ml, respectively (compared with 38 ng/ml on diestrus 1), and therefore
the mean blood level of LH on both days was significantly lower than on diestrus 1, although still
higher than on estrus because of different pulse frequencies. Therefore, LH release is pulsatile during
periods of low level LH secretion in the rat estrous cycle, and changes in the pulsatile characteristics of this release occur with different stages of the cycle.
Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I want to thank Cindy Voytek and Geoffrey Lewis
for their skilled technical assistance in these experiments, Mark Brownfield and Antonella Bona Gallo for
their valuable suggestions concerning the LH radioimmunoassay, Annette Lowe for figures, and Bonnie
Iwamasa and Jeanne Connolly for typing the manuscript. Thanks also to Dr. G. D. Niswender for antiovine LH #15, Dr. U. Papkoff for highly purified
ovine LH for iodination, Dr. J. Garcia for goat antiserum against rabbit gamma globulin, and Dr. A. F.
Parlow and the NIAMDD for the rat LH used as a
reference preparation.
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