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Biology of Reproduction 60, 602-610 (1999)
©Copyright 1999 Society for the Study of Reproduction, Inc.

Prolactin Replacement Fails to Inhibit Reactivation of Gonadotropin Secretion in Rams Treated with Melatonin under Long Days

Gerald A. Lincoln1,a, and Domingo J. Tortonese2,a

a MRC Reproductive Biology Unit, Centre for Reproductive Biology, Edinburgh EH3 9EW, Scotland, United Kingdom

This study tested the hypothesis that prolactin (PRL) inhibits gonadotropin secretion in rams maintained under long days and that treatment with melatonin (s.c. continuous-release implant; MEL-IMP) reactivates the reproductive axis by suppressing PRL secretion. Adult Soay rams were maintained under long days (16L:8D) and received 1) no further treatment (control, C); 2) MEL-IMP for 16 wk and injections of saline/vehicle for the first 8 wk (M); 3) MEL-IMP for 16 wk and exogenous PRL (s.c. 5 mg ovine PRL 3x daily) for the first 8 wk (M+P). The treatment with melatonin induced a rapid increase in the blood concentrations of FSH and testosterone, rapid growth of the testes, an increase in the frequency of LH pulses, and a decrease in the LH response to N-methyl-D,L-aspartic acid. The concomitant treatment with exogenous PRL had no effect on these reproductive responses but caused a significant delay in the timing of the sexual skin color and growth of the winter pelage. These results do not support the hypothesis and suggest that PRL at physiological long-day concentrations, while being totally ineffective as an inhibitor of gonadotropin secretion, acts in the peripheral tissues and skin to maintain summer characteristics.

1 Correspondence: G.A. Lincoln, MRC Reproductive Biology Unit, Centre for Reproductive Biology, 37 Chalmers Street, Edinburgh EH3 9EW, Scotland, UK. FAX: 44 131 228 5571; g.lincoln{at}ed-rbu.mrc.ac.uk

2 Current address: Department of Anatomy, University of Bristol, Southwell Street, Bristol, BS2 8EJ, England, UK.




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