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Endocrinology, Vol 125, 1795-1804, Copyright © 1989 by Endocrine Society
ARTICLES |
LJ Mauro, RP Elde, OM Youngren, RE Phillips and ME el Halawani
Department of Animal Science, University of Minnesota, St. Paul 55108.
Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) has potent PRL-releasing activity, but its physiological role in the regulation of PRL release during the avian reproductive cycle is not known. We used indirect immunofluorescence to determine if changes in hypothalamic VIP are associated with the shifts in circulating PRL during the reproductive cycle of the domestic turkey. In the naturally hyperprolactinemic incubating hen, the majority of VIP immunoreactivity (VIP-IR) existed within neurons of the infundibular nuclear complex (INF) and fibers in the external layer of the median eminence. Within the INF, the numbers of VIP-IR cells increased during the cycle, paralleling increases in serum PRL. In the reproductively inactive, nonphotostimulated hen with low serum PRL, essentially no positive cells were noted, whereas the incubating hen exhibited 32.1 +/- 2.2 cells/pair of adjacent sections in the anterior INF and 59.6 +/- 2.0 cells in the posterior INF. Exposure of inactive hens to a stimulatory photoperiod resulted in a 2.6-fold increase in serum PRL with the appearance of VIP-IR cells in the INF. During laying and incubation, further increases were observed in the number of positive cells in the INF and serum PRL as well as a greater fiber density in the median eminence. To further examine the association between changes in VIP-IR and serum PRL, circulating PRL was artificially lowered by depriving incubating hens of their nests for 0, 2, 5, and 10 days. On day 2 of nest deprivation, serum PRL declined markedly to 12% of day 0 levels, with VIP-IR cell numbers at 64% and 46% in the anterior and posterior INF, respectively. By day 10, birds exhibited cell numbers in the INF averaging 20% of those observed in the day 0 incubating hens, with serum PRL at 6% of day 0 levels. The results of these studies indicate a possible causal relationship between hypothalamic VIP and changes in PRL secretion during the avian reproductive cycle, providing a basis for further research on the importance of this peptide as well as factors responsible for the modulation of its expression in hypothalamic INF neurons.
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