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1.
RFamide-related peptide gene is a melatonin-driven photoperiodic gene   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In seasonal species, various physiological processes including reproduction are organized by photoperiod via melatonin, but the mechanisms of melatonin action are still unknown. In birds, the peptide gonadotropin-inhibiting hormone (GnIH) has been shown to have inhibitory effects on reproductive activity and displays seasonal changes of expression. Here we present evidence in mammals that the gene orthologous to GnIH, the RFamide-related peptide (RFRP) gene, expressed in the mediobasal hypothalamus, is strongly regulated by the length of the photoperiod, via melatonin. The level of RFRP mRNA and the number of RFRP-immunoreactive cell bodies were reduced in sexually quiescent Syrian and Siberian hamsters acclimated to short-day photoperiod (SD) compared with sexually active animals maintained under long-day photoperiod (LD). This was contrasted in the laboratory Wistar rat, a non-photoperiodic breeder, in which no evidence for RFRP photoperiodic modulation was seen. In Syrian hamsters, the reduction of RFRP expression in SD was independent from secondary changes in gonadal steroids. By contrast, the photoperiodic variation of RFRP expression was abolished in pinealectomized hamsters, and injections of LD hamsters with melatonin for 60 d provoked inhibition of RFRP expression down to SD levels, indicating that the regulation is dependent on melatonin. Altogether, these results demonstrate that in these hamster species, the RFRP neurons are photoperiodically modulated via a melatonin-dependent process. These observations raise questions on the role of RFRP as a general inhibitor of reproduction and evoke new perspectives for understanding how melatonin controls seasonal processes via hypothalamic targets.  相似文献   

2.
In seasonal mammals, a distinct photoneuroendocrine circuit that involves the pineal hormone melatonin tightly synchronizes reproduction with seasons. In the Syrian hamster, a seasonal model in which sexual activity is inhibited by short days, we have previously shown that the potent GnRH stimulator, kisspeptin, is crucial to convey melatonin's message; however, the precise mechanisms through which melatonin affects kisspeptin remain unclear. Interestingly, rfrp gene expression in the neurons of the dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus, a brain region in which melatonin receptors are present in the Syrian hamster, is strongly down-regulated by melatonin in short days. Because a large body of evidence now indicates that RFamide-related peptide (RFRP)-3, the product of the rfrp gene, is an inhibitor of gonadotropin secretion in various mammalian species, we sought to investigate its effect on the gonadotrophic axis in the Syrian hamster. We show that acute central injection of RFRP-3 induces c-Fos expression in GnRH neurons and increases LH, FSH, and testosterone secretion. Moreover, chronic central administration of RFRP-3 restores testicular activity and Kiss1 levels in the arcuate nucleus of hamsters despite persisting photoinhibitory conditions. By contrast RFRP-3 does not have a hypophysiotrophic effect. Overall, these findings demonstrate that, in the male Syrian hamster, RFRP-3 exerts a stimulatory effect on the reproductive axis, most likely via hypothalamic targets. This places RFRP-3 in a decisive position between the melatonergic message and Kiss1 seasonal regulation. Additionally, our data suggest for the first time that the function of this peptide depends on the species and the physiological status of the animal model.  相似文献   

3.
We previously isolated a novel dodecapeptide containing a C-terminal -Arg-Phe-NH(2) sequence, SIKPSAYLPLRF-NH(2) (RFamide peptide), from the Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) brain. This novel quail peptide was shown to be located in neurons of the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and their terminals in the median eminence (ME), and to decrease gonadotropin release from cultured anterior pituitary in adult birds. We therefore designated this peptide gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH). Furthermore, a cDNA encoding the GnIH precursor polypeptide has been characterized. To understand the physiological roles of this peptide, in the present study we analyzed developmental changes in the expressions of GnIH precursor mRNA and the mature peptide GnIH during embryonic and posthatch ages in the quail diencephalon including the PVN and ME. GnIH precursor mRNA was expressed in the diencephalon on embryonic day 10 (E10) and showed a significant increase on E17, just before hatch. GnIH was also detected in the diencephalon on E10 and increased significantly around hatch. Subsequently, the diencephalic GnIH content decreased temporarily, and again increased progressively until adulthood. GnIH-like immunoreactive (GnIH-ir) neurons were localized in the PVN on E10, but GnIH-ir fibers did not extend to the ME. However, GnIH-ir neurons increased in the PVN on E17, just before hatch, and GnIH-ir fibers extended to the external layer of the ME, as in adulthood. These results suggest that GnIH begins its function around hatch and acts as a hypothalamic factor to regulate gonadotropin release in the bird.  相似文献   

4.
Gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH), a newly discovered hypothalamic RFamide peptide, inhibits reproductive activity by decreasing gonadotropin synthesis and release in birds. The gene of the mammalian RFamide-related peptides (RFRP) is orthologous to the GnIH gene. This Rfrp gene gives rise to the two biologically active peptides RFRP-1 (NPSF) and RFRP-3 (NPVF), and i.c.v. injections of RFRP-3 suppress LH secretion in several mammalian species. In this study, we show whether RFRP-3 affects LH secretion at the pituitary level and/or via the release of GnRH at the hypothalamus in mammals. To investigate the suppressive effects of RFRP-3 on the mean level of LH secretion and the frequency of pulsatile LH secretion in vivo, ovariectomized (OVX) mature rats were administered RFRP-3 using either i.c.v. or i.v. injections. Furthermore, the effect of RFRP-3 on LH secretion was also investigated using cultured female rat pituitary cells. With i.v. administrations, RFRP-3 significantly reduced plasma LH concentrations when compared with the physiological saline group. However, after i.c.v. RFRP-3 injections, neither the mean level of LH concentrations nor the frequency of the pulsatile LH secretion was affected. When using cultured pituitary cells, in the absence of GnRH, the suppressive effect of RFRP-3 on LH secretion was not clear, but when GnRH was present, RFRP-3 significantly suppressed LH secretion. These results suggest that RFRP-3 does not affect LH secretion via the release of GnRH, and that RFRP-3 directly acts upon the pituitary to suppress GnRH-stimulated LH secretion in female rats.  相似文献   

5.
Successful reproduction requires maintenance of the reproductive axis within fine operating limits through negative feedback actions of sex steroids. Despite the importance of this homeostatic process, our understanding of the neural loci, pathways, and neurochemicals responsible remain incomplete. Here, we reveal a neuropeptidergic pathway that directly links gonadal steroid actions to regulation of the reproductive system. An RFamide (Arg-Phe-NH2) peptide that inhibits gonadotropin release from quail pituitary was recently identified and named gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH). Birds are known to have specialized adaptations associated with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) regulation to optimize reproduction (e.g., encephalic photoreceptors), and the existence of a hypothalamic peptide inhibiting gonadotropins may or may not be another such specialization. To determine whether GnIH serves as a signaling pathway for sex steroid regulation of the reproductive axis, we used immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization to characterize the distribution and functional role of this peptide in hamsters, rats, and mice. GnIH-immunoreactive (GnIH-ir) cell bodies are clustered in the mediobasal hypothalamus with pronounced projections and terminals throughout the CNS. In vivo GnIH administration rapidly inhibits luteinizing hormone secretion. Additionally, GnIH-ir neurons form close appositions with GnRH cells, suggesting a direct means of GnRH modulation. Finally, GnIH-ir cells express estrogen receptor-alpha and exhibit robust immediate early gene expression after gonadal hormone stimulation. Taken together, the distribution of GnIH efferents to neural sites regulating reproductive behavior and neuroendocrine secretions, expression of steroid receptors in GnIH-ir nuclei, and GnIH inhibition of luteinizing hormone secretion indicate the discovery of a system regulating the mammalian reproductive axis.  相似文献   

6.
We recently identified a novel hypothalamic neuropeptide inhibiting gonadotropin release in quail and termed it gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH). Cell bodies and terminals containing the dodecapeptide GnIH are localized in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and median eminence, respectively. To understand the physiological role of GnIH, we investigated the mechanisms that regulate GnIH expression. In this study, we show that melatonin originating from the pineal gland and eyes induces GnIH expression in the quail brain. Pinealectomy (Px) combined with orbital enucleation (Ex) (Px plus Ex) decreased the expression of GnIH precursor mRNA and content of mature GnIH peptide in the diencephalon, which includes the PVN and median eminence. Melatonin administration to Px plus Ex birds caused a dose-dependent increase in expression of GnIH precursor mRNA and production of mature peptide. The expression of GnIH was photoperiodically controlled and increased under short-day photoperiods, when the duration of melatonin secretion increases. To identify the mode of melatonin action on GnIH induction, we investigated the expression of Mel(1c), a melatonin receptor subtype, in GnIH neurons. In situ hybridization of Mel(1c) mRNA combined with immunocytochemistry for GnIH revealed that Mel(1c) mRNA was expressed in GnIH-immunoreactive neurons in the PVN. Melatonin receptor autoradiography further revealed specific binding of melatonin in the PVN. These results indicate that melatonin is a key factor for GnIH induction. Melatonin appears to act directly on GnIH neurons through its receptor to induce GnIH expression. This is the first demonstration, to our knowledge, of a direct action of melatonin on neuropeptide induction in any vertebrate class.  相似文献   

7.
In seasonal species, photoperiod (i.e. daylength) tightly regulates reproduction to ensure that birth occurs at the most favorable time of year. In mammals, a distinct photoneuroendocrine circuit controls this process via the pineal hormone melatonin. This hormone is responsible for the seasonal regulation of reproduction, but the anatomical substrate and the cellular mechanism through which melatonin modulates sexual activity is far from understood. The Syrian hamster is widely used to explore the photoneuroendocrine system, because it is a seasonal model in which sexual activity is promoted by long summer days (LD) and inhibited by short winter days (SD). Recent evidences indicate that the products of the KiSS-1 gene, kisspeptins, and their specific receptor GPR54, represent potent stimulators of the sexual axis. We have shown that melatonin impacts on KiSS-1 expression to control reproduction in the Syrian hamster. In this species, KiSS-1 is expressed in the antero-ventral-periventricular and arcuate nuclei of the hypothalamus at significantly higher levels in hamsters kept in LD as compared to SD. In the arcuate nucleus, the downregulation of KiSS-1 expression in SD appears to be mediated by melatonin and not by secondary changes in gonadal hormones. Remarkably, a chronic administration of kisspeptin restores testicular activity in SD hamsters, despite persisting photoinhibitory conditions. Overall, these findings are consistent with a role of KiSS-1/GPR54 in the seasonal control of reproduction. We propose that the photoperiod, via melatonin, modulates KiSS-1 neurons to drive the reproductive axis.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Siberian hamsters have decreased gonadotropin levels and testis size after short-day (SD) exposure. Upon transfer from short to long days, FSH and testis weight increase rapidly, whereas LH and T remain low for much longer. We investigated whether an additional environmental stimulus, specifically a female, could trigger an earlier release of LH and whether the response to the female was dependent on photoperiod. An increase in serum LH was induced in long day (LD), but not SD, males within minutes of female exposure. The ability of SD males to secrete LH upon female exposure was regained within 4 d of photostimulation. FSH was not secreted after female exposure, but varied with photoperiod. Thus, FSH and LH are differentially regulated by photoperiod and female exposure. In subsequent studies melatonin injections and a GnRH antagonist were used to show that photoperiod modulates the endocrine responsiveness of a male to a female via melatonin and that female-induced LH release is GnRH dependent. Collectively, these results suggest separation of gonadotropin signaling pathways by environmental stimuli and provide an excellent model to elucidate the effects of photoperiod on the processing of social and chemosensory inputs to the GnRH neurons of the hypothalamus.  相似文献   

10.
Two experiments investigated the response of the pituitary-gonadal axis of pinealectomized male Syrian hamsters to programmed systemic administration of melatonin. In the first experiment, castrated male Syrian hamsters were housed in a short photoperiod (8L:16D) and maintained on subcutaneous testosterone implants for 7 weeks. These males were then pinealectomized or sham-pinealectomized and their testosterone capsules removed. Daily infusions of melatonin 250 ng/infusion) or its vehicle were administered for 3 weeks; infusion duration was long (11 or 12 hr) or short (6 hr). Measurement of serum luteinizing hormone (LH) following this 3-week period indicated that long-duration melatonin infusions mimicked short-day conditions (LH levels were low), but short-duration infusions did not (LH levels were significantly elevated). In the second experiment, pinealectomized, gonadally intact males were housed in a 12L:12D photoperiod and injected once daily with melatonin or its vehicle, either 3 or 5 hr after dark onset for 11 weeks. These times were chosen to coincide with the light:dark cycle phase that according to published reports is optimally responsive to exogenous melatonin for the induction of short-photoperiodic effects. Melatonin injections did not induce gonadal regression in pinealectomized hamsters. Melatonin and vehicle-treated males responded similarly; their testis widths and serum testosterone levels were not significantly different at the end of the experiment. These results support the hypothesis that the duration of melatonin secretion each night is an important variable in conveying photoperiodic information, but that the circadian phase during which melatonin is present is not.  相似文献   

11.
The role of endogenous opiates in the regulation of photoperiodically induced testicular regression was studied in the male Syrian hamster. In reproductively active hamsters exposed to a long photoperiod (LD; 16 h light: 8 h darkness) or to short days (SD; 8 h light: 16 h darkness) for 20 weeks or to SD after pinealectomy, administration of naloxone, a competitive opiate receptor antagonist, at doses of 2.5-20 mg/kg, significantly increased serum LH concentrations. In marked contrast, these doses of naloxone did not produce any change in LH levels in reproductively quiescent hamsters exposed to SD for 8 weeks. The influence of gonadal steroids on the LH response to naloxone was studied in hamsters castrated or castrated and implanted s.c with a capsule containing testosterone. Naloxone did not induce LH release in castrated hamsters maintained in LD or in SD, but this response was restored in LD but not SD when serum testosterone concentrations were maintained at levels similar to those observed in intact reproductively active hamsters. These results show that inhibition of reproduction by the photoperiod prevents naloxone-induced LH release in the male hamster. This lack of response to naloxone is not due, however, to the lower testosterone titres present in these animals compared with reproductively active animals. Responsiveness to naloxone can be restored when the animal is rendered insensitive to the inhibitory photoperiod either by removal of the pineal gland or by induction of photorefractoriness by extended exposure to SD.  相似文献   

12.
Effects of photoperiod are mediated by the pineal gland in male Siberian hamsters. The hypothesis that the pineal hormone melatonin mediates the effects of short days (SD) to blunt select humoral and endocrine functions was tested. In the first study, regressed testes were found in pineal-intact controls transferred from long days (LD) to SDs (16 hr to 8 hr light/day); the rise in antigen-induced serum immunoglobulin (Ig) M was blunted and serum cortisol concentrations elevated compared with long-day controls. These effects of short-day were blocked in pinealectomized males moved from long to SDs, but restored by melatonin treatments. In a second study, males in LD were exposed to constant light (LL) to abolish the nighttime melatonin rhythm. In hamsters in LL, melatonin induced testicular regression as in males in SDs. Large testes were present in vehicle-treated controls in LL and in males that remained in LDs. Antigen-induced increases in serum IgM in vehicle and melatonin treatment males in LL were intermediate between concentrations in long- or short-day controls and not significantly different from each other. However, serum cortisol was again elevated in hamsters in SDs or in LL when treated with melatonin compared with males in LL or LDs. These findings indicate that melatonin treatments mimicked the effects of SDs to regulate adaptive physiologic functions in hamsters lacking the nocturnal melatonin rhythm. Thus, the photoneuroendocrine mechanism regulating reproductive responses to photoperiod also mediates short-day effects on T cell-dependent B-cell antibody production and processes that regulate cortisol in circulation.  相似文献   

13.
Gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH) is a hypothalamic dodecapeptide (SIKPSAYLPLRF-NH(2)) that directly inhibits gonadotropin synthesis and release from quail pituitary. The action of GnIH is mediated by a novel G-protein coupled receptor. This gonadotropin-inhibitory system may be widespread in vertebrates, at least birds and mammals. In these higher vertebrates, histological evidence suggests contact of GnIH immunoreactive axon terminals with GnRH neurons, thus indicating direct regulation of GnRH neuronal activity by GnIH. In this study we investigated the interaction of GnIH and GnRH-I and -II neurons in European starling (Sturnus vulgaris) brain. Cloned starling GnIH precursor cDNA encoded three peptides that possess characteristic LPXRF-amide (X = L or Q) motifs at the C termini. Starling GnIH was further identified as SIKPFANLPLRF-NH(2) by mass spectrometry combined with immunoaffinity purification. GnIH neurons, identified by in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry (ICC), were clustered in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus. GnIH immunoreactive fiber terminals were present in the external layer of the median eminence in addition to the preoptic area and midbrain, where GnRH-I and GnRH-II neuronal cell bodies exist, respectively. GnIH axon terminals on GnRH-I and -II neurons were shown by GnIH and GnRH double-label ICC. Furthermore, the expression of starling GnIH receptor mRNA was identified in both GnRH-I and GnRH-II neurons by in situ hybridization combined with GnRH ICC. The cellular localization of GnIH receptor has not previously been identified in any vertebrate brain. Thus, GnIH may regulate reproduction of vertebrates by directly modulating GnRH-I and GnRH-II neuronal activity, in addition to influencing the pituitary gland.  相似文献   

14.
Hamsters exposed to short-day photoperiods (6-h light, 18-h darkness) develop a reversible inhibition of the reproductive axis which includes decreased LH pulse frequency, decreased FSH and testosterone levels, testicular regression, and presumably, decreased luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) release. The decrease in LHRH release could reflect a decrease in the ability of LHRH neurons to release the decapeptide in response to intermittent neuronal excitation. To analyze this possibility, the LHRH secretagogue, N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMA) was used to estimate relative releasability of endogenous LHRH pulses in hamsters exposed to long- and short-day photoperiods. Long-day (LD) or short-day (SD) hamsters were fitted with indwelling atrial catheters 2 days before experimentation. During 5-h sampling sessions (1300-1800 h), blood was withdrawn at 10-min intervals. In initial experiments, a NMA dose-response analysis revealed that 10 and 20 mg/kg NMA but not 2.5 and 5 mg/kg NMA, produced significant, dose-related LH responses in LD hamsters. Treatments with LHRH antagonist 4 h prior to NMA treatment completely blocked LH responses. The 10 mg/kg NMA dose was then used to directly compare LHRH responsiveness in LD and SD hamsters. NMA injections were administered to groups of LD and SD hamsters after hours 1, 2, 3, and 4 of sampling. In LD hamsters, LH responses to the first NMA pulse (2.65 +/- 0.09) were followed by diminishing responses to the second, third, and fourth NMA pulses (1.22 +/- 0.50, 1.22 +/- 0.43, and 1.15 +/- 0.42). By contrast, initial LH responses in SD hamsters (1.61 +/- 0.31) were followed by even more robust LH responses to the second, third, and fourth NMA challenges (2.89 +/- 0.34, 3.08 +/- 0.59, 2.65 +/- 0.32). Although LH responses to the first NMA pulse were slightly less in SD vs. LD animals, responses to all subsequent injections were actually greater in SD hamsters vs. their LD counterparts. Injections of 20 ng/kg LHRH in SD hamsters produced LH responses similar to those evoked by NMA. The same LHRH dose also produced continued, robust LH responses in LD hamsters, indicating that decrements in response to NMA were not due to diminished pituitary responsiveness. These results suggest that 1) the stimulatory actions of NMA are mediated by LHRH, 2) exposure to short days does not decrease the responsiveness of LHRH neurons to NMA, and 3) successive NMA challenges produce diminishing LH responses in LD hamsters, but not in SD hamsters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Exposure of adult male golden hamsters to short days (less than 12.5 h light/day) leads to suppression of gonadal function which is secondary to reductions in gonadotropin and prolactin (PRL) secretion. Short-day (SD) exposure also leads to a reduction in hypothalamic norepinephrine (NE) and dopamine (DA) metabolism and an increase in hypothalamic LHRH content which appears to be related to a decrease in LHRH release. To determine whether SD-induced changes in NE and DA metabolism are dependent or independent of changes in circulating testosterone (T) levels and thus possible mediators of photoperiod effects on gonadotropin secretion, the effects of castration and steroid replacement on hypothalamic amine metabolism were studied in male hamsters maintained under long or short photoperiod conditions. The presence of Silastic T-implants resulted in a greater suppression of LH and FSH in SD than in long-day (LD) hamster, but increased median eminence (ME) LHRH content in both groups. Exposure of castrate hamsters to short days led to a reduction of NE turnover in the ME and medial preoptic-suprachiasmatic area (MPOA) and a decrease in serum FSH levels. LH levels tended to be lower, but not significantly so. The decrease in ME NE turnover was potentiated by T replacement, but in the MPOA-SCN, T-implants reversed the effects of short days. NE turnover in the MBH was reduced by T in both LD and SD animals, but the effect was much greater in the SD animals. SD exposure also caused a decrease in ME DA metabolism that was reversed by T replacement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The decapeptide gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is the primary factor responsible for the hypothalamic control of gonadotropin secretion. Gonadal sex steroids and inhibin inhibit gonadotropin secretion via feedback from the gonads, but a neuropeptide inhibitor of gonadotropin secretion was, until recently, unknown in vertebrates. In 2000, we identified a novel hypothalamic dodecapeptide that inhibits gonadotropin release in cultured quail pituitaries and termed it gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH). To elucidate the mode of action of GnIH, we then identified a novel G protein-coupled receptor for GnIH in quail. The GnIH receptor possesses seven transmembrane domains and specifically binds to GnIH. The GnIH receptor is expressed in the pituitary and several brain regions including the hypothalamus. These results indicate that GnIH acts directly on the pituitary via GnIH receptor to inhibit gonadotropin release. GnIH may also act on the hypothalamus to inhibit GnRH release. To demonstrate the functional significance of GnIH and its potential role as a key regulatory neuropeptide in avian reproduction, we investigated GnIH actions on gonadal development and maintenance in quail. Chronic treatment with GnIH inhibited gonadal development and maintenance by decreasing gonadotropin synthesis and release. GnIH was also found in the hypothalamus of other avian species including sparrows and chickens and also inhibited gonadotropin synthesis and release. The pineal hormone melatonin may be a key factor controlling GnIH neural function, since quail GnIH neurons express melatonin receptor and melatonin treatment stimulates the expression of GnIH mRNA and mature GnIH peptide. Thus, GnIH is capable of transducing photoperiodic information via changes in the melatonin signal, thereby influencing the reproductive axis. It is concluded that GnIH, a newly discovered hypothalamic neuropeptide, is a key factor controlling avian reproduction. The discovery of avian GnIH opens a new research field in reproductive neuroendocrinology.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of long-term daily melatonin infusions on the melatonin synthetic pathway in the Harderian glands and eyes of male Siberian hamsters were studied. Hamsters were pinealectomized (PX) and infused daily for 8 hr with either melatonin (6 microg/hr) or vehicle for 7 days in short photoperiod (SP, 10L:14D), followed by 14 wk in either SP (SP group) or in constant darkness (DD group). After the infusion period (15 wk), the infusion was stopped and animals were transferred into SP for 3 wk. The hamsters were then killed at midday or midnight. Exogenous melatonin infusion caused an increase in the Harderian gland weight, which was still evident 3 wk after the end of the treatment. In addition, exogenous melatonin increased endogenous melatonin concentrations (4-fold) and hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT) activity (2-fold). N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity, however, was not increased, and no day/night difference in melatonin content and HIOMT activity was observed in the Harderian glands. In the eye, melatonin infusions significantly increased day and night-time melatonin levels (up to 3-fold) and both NAT and HIOMT activities (up to 3.5-fold). This effect of melatonin treatment was observed in both SP and DD groups. These observations demonstrate that exogenously-infused melatonin at relatively high doses activates the synthesis of endogenous melatonin in the Harderian gland and eye of the Siberian hamster. Circulating levels of melatonin were also markedly increased, indicating that in these conditions melatonin may be released from extra-pineal sites.  相似文献   

18.
The neuropeptide control of gonadotropin secretion is primarily through the stimulatory action of the hypothalamic decapeptide, GnRH. We recently identified a novel hypothalamic dodecapeptide with a C-terminal LeuPro-Leu-Arg-Phe-NH2 sequence in the domestic bird, Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica). This novel peptide inhibited gonadotropin release in vitro from the quail anterior pituitary; thus it was named gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH). GnIH may be an important factor regulating reproductive activity not only in domesticated birds but also in wild, seasonally breeding birds. Thus, we tested synthetic quail GnIH in seasonally breeding wild bird species. In an in vivo experiment, chicken gonadotropin-releasing hormone-I (cGnRH-I) alone or a cGnRH-I/quail GnIH cocktail was injected i.v. into non-breeding song sparrows (Melospiza melodia). Quail GnIH rapidly (within 2 min) attenuated the GnRH-induced rise in plasma LH. Furthermore, we tested the effects of quail GnIH in castrated, photostimulated Gambel's white-crowned sparrows (Zonotrichia leucophrys gambelii), using quail GnIH or saline for injection. Again, quail GnIH rapidly reduced plasma LH (within 3 min) compared with controls. To characterize fully the action of GnIH in wild birds, the identification of their endogenous GnIH is essential. Therefore, in the present study a cDNA encoding GnIH in the brain of Gambel's white-crowned sparrow was cloned by a combination of 3' and 5' rapid amplification of cDNA ends and compared with the quail GnIH cDNA previously identified. The deduced sparrow GnIH precursor consisted of 173 amino acid residues, encoding one sparrow GnIH and two sparrow GnIH-related peptides (sparrow GnIH-RP-1 and GnIH-RP-2) that included Leu-Pro-Xaa-Arg-Phe-NH2 (Xaa=Leu or Gln) at their C-termini. All these peptide sequences were flanked by a glycine C-terminal amidation signal and a single basic amino acid on each end as an endoproteolytic site. Although the homology of sparrow and quail GnIH precursors was approximately 66%, the C-terminal structures of GnIH, GnIH-RP-1 and GnIH-RP-2 were all identical in two species. In situ hybridization revealed the cellular localization of sparrow GnIH mRNA in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus. Immunohistochemical analysis also showed that sparrow GnIH-like immunoreactive cell bodies and terminals were localized in the PVN and median eminence respectively. Thus, only the sparrow PVN expresses GnIH, which appears to be a hypothalamic inhibitory factor for LH release, as evident from our field injections of GnIH into free-living breeding white-crowned sparrows. Sparrow GnIH rapidly (within 2 min) reduced plasma LH when injected into free-living Gambel's white-crowned sparrows on their breeding grounds in northern Alaska. Taken together, our results indicate that, despite amino acid sequence differences, quail GnIH and sparrow GnIH have similar inhibitory effects on the reproductive axis in wild sparrow species. Thus, GnIH appears to be a modulator of gonadotropin release.  相似文献   

19.
Leptin may play a role in appetite regulation and metabolism, but its reproductive role is less clear. In photoperiodic Siberian hamsters, seasonal changes in fatness, leptin gene expression, and metabolism occur synchronously with activation or suppression of reproduction, analogous to puberty. Here, we test the hypothesis that seasonal changes in leptin secretion mediate the photoperiodic regulation of reproduction. Mature male and ovariectomized estrogen-treated female Siberian hamsters were kept in long (LD; 16 h of light, 8 h of darkness) or short days (SD; 8 h of light, 16 h of darkness) for 8 weeks, and recombinant murine leptin (15 microg/day) was infused for 2 weeks via osmotic minipumps. SD hamsters exhibited significant weight and fat losses, reduced serum leptin and food intake, and suppressed pituitary LH concentration. Leptin did not suppress food intake over the 2-week treatment on either photoperiod, but significantly reduced fat reserves in SD hamsters. Leptin had no significant effect on pituitary LH concentrations in either sex or photoperiod or on testicular size and testosterone concentrations in males. These results suggest hamsters are more responsive to leptin on SD than on LD and that effects on food intake and fat loss can be dissociated in this species. Our data suggest that leptin does not mediate photoperiodic reproductive changes.  相似文献   

20.
Probing undiscovered hypothalamic neuropeptides that play important roles in the regulation of pituitary function in vertebrates is essential for the progress of neuroendocrinology. In 2000, we discovered a novel hypothalamic dodecapeptide inhibiting gonadotropin release in quail and termed it gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH). GnIH acts on the pituitary and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons in the hypothalamus via a novel G protein-coupled receptor for GnIH to inhibit gonadal development and maintenance by decreasing gonadotropin release and synthesis. Similar findings were observed in other avian species. Thus, GnIH is a key factor controlling avian reproduction. To give our findings a broader perspective, we also found GnIH homologous peptides in the hypothalamus of other vertebrates, such as mammals, reptiles, amphibians and teleosts. GnIH and its homologs share a common C-terminal LPXRFamide (X = L or Q) motif. A mammalian GnIH homolog also inhibited gonadotropin release in mammals like the GnIH action in birds. In contrast to higher vertebrates, hypophysiotropic activities of GnIH homologs were different in lower vertebrates. To clarify the evolutionary origin of GnIH and its homologs, we further sought to identify novel LPXRFamide peptides from the brain of sea lamprey and hagfish, two extant groups of the oldest lineage of vertebrates, Agnatha. In these agnathans, LPXRFamide peptide and its cDNA were identified only from the brain of hagfish. Based on these findings over the past decade, this paper summarizes the evolutionary origin and divergence of GnIH and its homologous peptides.  相似文献   

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