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  • Title: Effect of gonadectomy on growth and GH responsiveness in dwarf rats.
    Author: Gevers EF, Wit JM, Robinson IC.
    Journal: J Endocrinol; 1995 Apr; 145(1):69-79. PubMed ID: 7798032.
    Abstract:
    Normal rats are sexually dimorphic in their growth and GH secretion. Gonadectomy (Gnx) changes the GH secretory pattern and this could explain differential growth rates in male and female rats. Gonadal steroids may also affect tissue growth directly, or by changing their responsiveness to GH. The effects of Gnx on growth, GH responsiveness, and hepatic GH receptors have now been studied in young (4-7 weeks old) GH-deficient dwarf rats in which the effects of steroid-induced alterations in residual endogenous GH secretion will be much less pronounced. Groups of intact and Gnx dwarf rats (n = 5-7) were infused with recombinant human GH (144 micrograms/day) either continuously or in a pulsatile pattern (every 3 h) for 7 days, whilst control groups received saline infusions. Gains in weight, length and tibial bone growth were measured. Female dwarf rats grew significantly more slowly than male dwarfs. Gnx in male dwarfs inhibited growth significantly, whereas ovariectomy had a lesser stimulatory effect in females. Hepatic lactogenic and somatogenic receptors were higher in females and ovariectomy lowered their values towards male levels. Pulsatile GH infusions were more effective than continuous infusions of the same daily GH dose, but when the different underlying growth rates (measured in saline-infused Gnx animals) were taken into account, the responsiveness to pulses of hGH was not different between males and females or between intact and Gnx animals. We have concluded that Gnx in dwarf rats does affect growth, but the effects are small in comparison with those seen in normal rats. Since pulsatile GH infusions stimulated growth more effectively than continuous GH, irrespective of the gonadal steroid status, and the responsiveness to exogenous GH was not changed by Gnx, the results imply that changes in the GH secretory pattern induced by gonadal steroids may have a larger impact on the growth rate than direct effects at the tissue level, at least in the rat.
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