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      Immunoreactive gonadotropin-releasing hormone-like material in the brain and the pituitary gland during the periovulatory period in the brown trout (Salmo trutta L.): relationships with the plasma and pituitary gonadotropin.

      General and Comparative Endocrinology
      Animals, Brain Chemistry, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Female, Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone, analysis, Gonadotropins, blood, Ovulation, Pituitary Gland, Radioimmunoassay, Salmonidae, metabolism, Testosterone, pharmacology, Trout

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          Abstract

          In fish there are few data on the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (Gn-RH) neurosecretory activity, which could explain long- and short-term variations of the gonadotropin secretion. There is no biological species specificity between mammal and fish Gn-RH; although there is a structural difference, they are, on the contrary, characterized by a high immunological specificity which does not allow measurement of fish Gn-RH using radioimmunoassay for LH-RH. We have synthesized salmon Gn-RH according to the formula recently proposed by Sherwood (N. Sherwood, L. Eiden, M. Brownstein, J. Spies, J. Rivier, and W. Vale, 1983. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 80, 2794-2798). Its activity has been tested by its ability to stimulate the gonadotropin hormone (GtH) secretion in vivo in testosterone-implanted juvenile rainbow trout, and for the recognition of synthesized Gn-RH (s-Gn-RH) perykaria by a specific antibody raised against the s-Gn-RH in regions of the brain described as containing LH-RH immunoreactive-like material. A radioimmunoassay has been developed for the salmon Gn-RH, and its specificity to measure trout Gn-RH has been tested. Using this assay, the brain and pituitary Gn-RH contents have been measured throughout the final phases of maturation and ovulation. Brain Gn-RH increases from the end of vitellogenesis (8.9 +/- 0.76 ng/brain) to ovulation (more than 15 ng/brain). Pituitary Gn-RH is lower (1.58 +/- 0.69 ng/pituitary) at the end of vitellogenesis and follows a similar profile as in the brain, except for a significant decrease just prior the beginning of oocyte maturation. The correlations between Gn-RH levels and GtH pituitary and plasma levels show that total brain Gn-RH is never correlated to the GtH, suggesting that the increase in the brain Gn-RH content is related to a Gn-RH system closely related to maturation and ovulation, which remains to be investigated. On the contrary, pituitary Gn-RH levels are well correlated with pituitary and plasma GtH levels, indicating that pituitary Gn-RH levels might represent a good index of the Gn-RH neurosecretory activity in the fish hypothalamohypophysial complex, given the absence of a portal system in teleost.

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