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Reproduction, Fertility and Development Reproduction, Fertility and Development Society
Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Involvement of serotoninergic pathways in the control of luteinizing hormone secretion in red deer hinds

Luis G. Villa-Diaz and Graham K. Barrell

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 11(2) 95 - 104
Published: 1999

Abstract

Two experiments were conducted to determine whether serotoninergic pathways, which are implicated in the neuroendocrine regulation of luteininzing hormone (LH) secretion in domestic animals, have a similar action in red deer hinds. In the non-breeding season (August), ovariectomized (n =5) and ovariectomized-thyroidectomized (n =5) hinds received a vehicle solution followed 4 h later by either serotonin (66 µg kg–1 i.v.) every 10 min for a further 4 h or the serotonin antagonist, cyproheptadine (3 mg kg–1 i.v.) as a single injection. This procedure was repeated in the breeding season (June). In the non-breeding season serotonin was without effect, but cyproheptadine reduced LH pulse frequency and amplitude in ovariectomized-thyroidectomized hinds (P<0.01). During the breeding season, serotonin reduced LH pulse amplitude in ovariectomized hinds (P<0.05) and cyproheptadine reduced LH pulse frequency in both ovariectomized and ovariectomized–thyroidectomized hinds (P<0.05 and P<0.01, respectively). On each occasion, cyproheptadine increased (P<0.01) plasma prolactin concentration, whereas serotonin had no effect. These results indicate a stimulatory role for serotoninergic neurons on the hypothalamic GnRH pulse generator mechanism of red deer hinds during the breeding season. In a second experiment, the LH response to GnRH (5 µg i.v.) was examined in ovariectomized hinds (n = 5) following administration of a serotonin infusion (6.6 µg kg–1 min–1 i.v. for 15 min), cyproheptadine (3 mg kg–1 i.v. as a single dose) or vehicle, in the breeding season (July) after induction of halothane anaesthesia and in the non-breeding season (December) without anaesthesia. Halothane anaesthesia eliminated endogenous pulses of LH. In comparison with the vehicle-treated controls, the response of plasma LH to exogenous GnRH was not altered by serotonin or cyproheptadine in either season, which shows that serotonin has no effect on LH release at the pituitary gland level in these animals. It was concluded that in the regulation of LH release in red deer hinds, serotoninergic pathways have a stimulatory role operating at the hypothalamic level.

Keywords: cyproheptadine, prolactin, serotonin.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RD99032

© CSIRO 1999

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