EFFECTS OF HYPOTHALAMIC DEAFFERENTATION AT DIFFERENT LEVELS ON METABOLISM OF HEPATIC STEROIDS IN RATS
- 1 July 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Journal of Endocrinology
- Vol. 86 (1) , 69-77
- https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.0860069
Abstract
The metabolism of 4-[4-14C]androstene-3,17-dione in the microsomal fraction of livers from male and female rats was investigated after hypothalamic deafferentation at two levels. It was found that frontal deafferentation at the retrochiasmatic level caused a complete 'feminization' of hepatic steroid metabolism in the male rat but was without effect in the female animal. Transection rostral to the suprachiasmatic nuclei was without effect in both sexes. A complete transition from male to female hepatic steroid metabolism after retrochiasmatic deafferentation was reached on day 4 after the operation and persisted for at least 10 weeks. The present results, taken together with previous investigations, indicate that the release of a 'feminizing' factor from the pituitary gland of the male rat is inhibited by a factor produced in, or transported through, the periventricular anterior hypothalamic region including the suprachiasmatic area. No effect on the hepatic steroid metabolism was observed after blinding of the rats suggesting that a diurnal rhythm is not essential to this control mechanism.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Central Control of Hepatic Steroid Metabolism: Effect of Discrete Hypothalamic Lesions*Endocrinology, 1978
- Effects of chronic hypothalamic lesions on diurnal and stress corticosteroid levelsAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1964