Evidence that a Decrease in Opioid Tone May Evoke Preovulatory Luteinizing Hormone Release in the Rat*
- 1 June 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Endocrine Society in Endocrinology
- Vol. 118 (6) , 2375-2381
- https://doi.org/10.1210/endo-118-6-2375
Abstract
We have assessed the effects on LH release of prolonged naloxone (NAL) treatment before the critical period on proestrus. When LH secretion was monitored at 5-min intervals immediately after the start of continuous NAL infusion (2 mg/0.6 ml saline .cntdot. h iv) at 1000 h, two types of responses were observed. In three of six rats, a small increase (1-2 ng rat LHRH-2/ml) during the first hour was followed by a sharp rise to 4-5 ng/ml in the second hour and a gradual return to baseline levels (0.5-1.00 ng/ml) in the third hour of infusion. In the remaining rats, LH responses were small with peak levels reaching 2 ng/ml range. When the effects were monitored 1 h after starting NAL infusion at 1000 h, the LH response was improved. Peak LH levels observed shortly before or after 1200 h varied between 4-14 ng/ml and in some rats the levels were comparable to those seen normally in the afternoon of proestrus (9-24 ng/ml). However, delaying the start of NAL infusion to 1200 h produced LH surges before 1400 h, with peak levels (27.5 .+-. 5.5 ng/ml) in the range of normal preovulatory LH surges (peak levels 16.6 .+-. 2.5 ng/ml), followed by a steady decrease in LH secretion. Additionally, sc NAL pellets implanted at 0930 h provoked premature LH hypersecretion with a temporal pattern (0930-1430 h)and magnitude (peak levels, 26.3 .+-. 4.3 ng/ml between 1100-1200 h) comparable to the normal preovulatory LH surge observed after 1330 h. Since NAL is believed to antagonize the inhibitory effects of endogenous opioids on LH secretion, the results of this study imply that a sustained restraint on this inhibitory opioid tone can elicit the LH surge before the critical period on proestrus. These findings are in accord with our thesis that the neural clock that normally triggers the preovulatory LH surge may transiently decrease the inhibitory opioid tone to allow expression of crucial neural events which culminate in preovulatory LH secretion.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Naloxone on Catecholamine and LHRH Release from the Perifused Hypothalamus of the Steroid-Primed RatNeuroendocrinology, 1985
- Modulation of Endogenous Opioid Influence on Luteinizing Hormone Secretion by Progesterone and Estrogen*Endocrinology, 1983
- Comparison of the Distribution of Dynorphin Systems and Enkephalin Systems in BrainScience, 1982
- The immunocytochemical localization of enkephalin in the central nervous system of the ratJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1981