Abstract: | Plasma concentrations of growth hormone (GH) were elevated in anaesthetized male domestic fowl following the intravenous administration of either synthetic human pancreatic GH-releasing factor 1-44 (NH2) (hpGRF) or synthetic thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH). In 6-week-old chicks the plasma GH level was elevated between 5 and 10 min after the injection of hpGRF at doses between 1 and 80 micrograms/kg. The magnitude of the response increased with doses of hpGRF between 1 and 10 micrograms/kg but declined with higher doses. The GH concentration rapidly declined between 10 and 20 min and between 20 and 40 min after injection. The administration of TRH had similar effects on GH secretion, although the responses were greater than with comparable doses of hpGRF, and the most effective dose (1-1.4 micrograms/kg) was less than with hpGRF. In anaesthetized adult cockerels GH secretion was also increased by the administration of hpGRF (1-20 micrograms/kg) or TRH (0.1-80 micrograms/kg) and in both cases the dose-response relationship was biphasic. The maximal response to TRH in adult birds was again greater than that produced by hpGRF although the response was less than that elicited in immature birds and required a higher dose (20 micrograms/kg) of TRH. The optimal dose of hpGRF and the magnitude of the GH response induced in adult birds was comparable with that in immature chicks. These results demonstrate provocative effects of TRH and hpGRF on GH secretion in the domestic fowl. The sensitivity of the GH response to TRH suggests that it may have a physiological role in the hypothalamic control of GH secretion. |