Growth hormone responses to multiple injections of a fragment of human growth hormone-releasing factor in conscious male and female rats
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Journal of Endocrinology
- Vol. 106 (3) , 281-289
- https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.1060281
Abstract
The GH responses to single i.v. injections of GH-releasing factor (GRF) in conscious male rats are highly variable. Although normal male rats show a pulsatile secretory pattern of GH with pulses occurring at intervals of 3–3·5 h, the peaks occur at different times in individual animals. We have compared the GH responses of young conscious male and female rats to multiple i.v. injections of 1 μg human (h) GRF1-29NH2. The peak GH responses occurred 3–5 min after hGRF1-29NH2 injection and were lower in female than in male rats. Both males and females responded uniformly to hGRF1-29NH2 injections given 180 min apart and the GH responses became entrained with no endogenous GH pulsing. Female rats produced consistent GH peaks in response to hGRF1-29NH2 injections at 90-min intervals, whereas male rats responded only to alternate injections, so that GH peaks occurred only every 180 min despite giving GRF every 90 min. When the frequency of hGRF1-29NH2 administration was increased to once every 40 min female rats again responded consistently to each injection. Male rats responded intermittently, being able to respond to two injections 40 min apart, after which they became refractory to hGRF1-29NH2. This cycle of varying sensitivity to GRF in male rats probably underlies their 3-hourly endogenous GH secretory rhythm. Female rats can respond uniformly to repeated GRF injections, consistent with their more continuous pattern of endogenous GH secretion. Introducing a pulse of 10 μg rat GH into a series of hGRF1-29NH2 injections did not induce refractoriness to hGRF1-29NH2, suggesting that GH does not itself desensitize the pituitary to GRF. Whether the different patterns of GH secretion in males and females result from different patterns of GRF and/or somatostatin secretion remains to be determined. J. Endocr. (1985) 106, 281–289This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
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