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Endocrinology, Vol 108, 2302-2307, Copyright © 1981 by Endocrine Society
ARTICLES |
RA Siegel, J Weidenfeld, S Feldman, N Conforti and I Chowers
Adult male rats, intact or bearing complete, anterior, or posterior hypothalamic deafferentations (CHD, AHD, or PHD, respectively) or bilateral medial forebrain bundle (MFB) lesions, were acutely exposed to visual, audiogenic, or thermal stress. Two to 30 min after stress onset, the rats were decapitated, and trunk blood was collected from serum LH, FSH, and testosterone (T) determinations. While basal serum LH levels were found to be normal in all experimental groups, FSH levels were reduced in CHD and AHD rats, and serum T concentrations were found to be 3-fold greater than control values in the AHD group. In intact animals, exposure to all modalities caused significant elevations in serum levels of both LH and T, with no effect on FSH secretion. In the CHD and AHD groups, the LH and T responses were eliminated, with the exception of the T response to heat exposure, which persisted in CHD animals. In the PHD group, the LH and T responses persisted and were, in fact, potentiated. Bilateral medial forebrain bundle lesions inhibited the LH and T responses to audiogenic and thermal, but not to visual, stimulation. These data demonstrate that 1) basal FHS, but not LH, secretion is dependent upon extrahypothalamic afferents to the medial basal hypothalamus; 2) acute neurogenic stress stimulates LH and T, but not FSH, secretion; and 3) central nervous system sites, rostral to the medial basal hypothalamus, mediate the stress-induced elevations in LH release.
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