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  • Title: Photoperiodic control of LH release in the ram. II. Light-androgens interaction.
    Author: Pelletier J, Ortavant R.
    Journal: Acta Endocrinol (Copenh); 1975 Mar; 78(3):442-50. PubMed ID: 1173013.
    Abstract:
    The intensity of negative feedback of androgens on hypothalamo-hypophyseal activity was compared in two groups of castrated rams under 8.00 or 16.00 h of daily illumination respectively following a conditioning period. In experiment I, two groups of 15 rams under each light photoperiod were slaughtered at different times after a 200 mg testosterone propionate (TP) intramuscular injection. Animals receiving the vehicle only acted as controls. The hypophyseal LH concentration, which increases when there is temporary inhibition of the release into the blood, was taken as a criterion of the inhibition due to TP. In both groups of rams the LH concentration increased in the pituitary following TP treatment. A return to the pre-injection level was observed 48 h later only in animals under a 8.00 h light photoperiod, indicating a shorter negative effect of the injection than in the case of rams under 16.00 h light photoperiod. In experiment II, the inhibitory effect of TP was assessed at two doses, i. e. 300 and 600 mg, by the decrease in the plasma LH level following an intramuscularly injection. In both cases the decrease in LH release was more pronounced in rams under 16.00 h of daily illumination than in those under 8.00 h (mean decrease in LH release: 21.2 and 33.2% respectively in 300 and 600 mg treated rams under 16.00 h daylight as against 9.2 and 14.8% in rams under 8.00 h). Thus it appears that to the intrinsic action of the photoperiod is superposed on a modulatory effect of steroid action on the hypothalamo-hypophyseal activity. The hypothesis is therefore presented that, in rams a decreasing light photoperiod acts in two ways: 1) by stimulating the activity of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal system, 2) by decreasing the intensity of the negative feedback effect of steroids.
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