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Publication : Pulse and Surge Profiles of Luteinizing Hormone Secretion in the Mouse.

First Author  Czieselsky K Year  2016
Journal  Endocrinology Volume  157
Issue  12 Pages  4794-4802
PubMed ID  27715255 Mgi Jnum  J:240654
Mgi Id  MGI:5888841 Doi  10.1210/en.2016-1351
Citation  Czieselsky K, et al. (2016) Pulse and Surge Profiles of Luteinizing Hormone Secretion in the Mouse. Endocrinology 157(12):4794-4802
abstractText  Using a new tail-tip bleeding procedure and a sensitive ELISA, we describe here the patterns of LH secretion throughout the mouse estrous cycle; in ovariectomized mice; in ovariectomized, estradiol-treated mice that model estrogen-negative and -positive feedback; and in transgenic GNR23 mice that exhibit allele-dependent reductions in GnRH neuron number. Pulsatile LH secretion was evident at all stages of the estrous cycle, with LH pulse frequency being approximately one pulse per hour in metestrous, diestrous, and proestrous mice but much less frequent at estrus (less than one pulse per 4 h). Ovariectomy resulted in substantial increases in basal and pulsatile LH secretion with pulses occurring approximately every 21 minutes. Chronic treatment with negative-feedback, estradiol-filled capsules returned LH pulse frequency to intact follicular phase levels, although pulse amplitude remained elevated. On the afternoon of proestrus, the LH surge was found to begin in a highly variable manner over a 4-hour range, lasting for more than 3 hours. In contrast, ovariectomized, estradiol-treated, positive-feedback mice exhibited a relatively uniform surge onset at approximately 0.5 hour prior to lights out. Gonadectomized wild-type and heterozygous GNR23 ( approximately 200 GnRH neurons) male mice exhibited an LH pulse every 60 minutes. Homozygous GNR23 mice ( approximately 80 GnRH neurons) had very low basal LH concentrations but continued to exhibit small amplitude LH pulses every 90 minutes. These studies provide the first characterization in mice of pulse and surge modes of LH secretion across the estrous cycle and demonstrate that very few GnRH neurons are required for pulsatile LH secretion.
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