The gonadotropin‐releasing hormone containing ventral hypothalamic tract in the fetal rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatto)
- 1 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 257 (1) , 130-139
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.902570110
Abstract
A well‐defined, gonadotropin‐releasing hormone (GnRH)‐containing fiber pathway, the ventral hypothalamic tract (VHT), is described by immunostaining in fetal rhesus macaques (109–156 days gestation). The VHT arises above the lateral aspects of the optic chiasm near the supraoptic nucleus, and courses ventromedially close to the ventral hypothalamic surface to terminate in the infundibulum and zona externa of the median eminence. It is formed by the confluence of GnRH‐immunopositive (GnRH +) axons from local neurons, from a few GnRH+ cells in the inferior thalamic peduncle, and probably from more anterior neurons in the septum and preoptic area. Bipolar GnRH 4‐ neurons contributing directly to the VHT are grouped at its origin dorsolateral to the optic chiasm, dorsal and medial to the optic tracts, at the infundibular lip, and within the pathway between. At the infundibular lip, GnRH+ perikarya are generally lateral or ventral to the infundibular (arcuate) nucleus, and are rarely within the nucleus itself. Cell bodies here are sometimes tripolar, but GnRH+ intercellular contacts are seldom seen. A few VHT fibers extend to the ventral surface of the brain just beneath the pia mater. Abundant capillaries in the subarachnoid space suggest a possible route for delivery of GnRH to the adenohypophysis in early gestation, before maturation of the hypophysial portal system occurs. Posterior to the infundibulum, a few VHT fibers are joined by descending periventricular fibers forming a dense fiber band beneath the premammillary recess of the third ventricle. Totals of GnRH+ cell bodies in the prosencephalon of the fetal rhesus macaque are estimated to be 5,600 in females (n=2) and 2,600 in males (n=3). More than 60% of VHT neurons are located in the medial basal hypothalamus, and the majority of basal hypothalamic GnRH+ neurons (86%) are associated with the VHT. Furthermore, reports of the autonomy of the medial basal hypothalamic‐hypophysial unit in control of gonadotropin secretion suggest that the VHT may be the most important GnRH system involved in primate reproduction. It is clear that fetal material may offer the best model to study the GnRH neuronal system in primates.Keywords
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