The effects of exogenous rat LH or FSH on the release of endogenous FSH in the cyclic rat have been investigated. Rats were administered phenobarbitone to block the spontaneous increases in gonadotrophins in plasma during pro-oestrus and oestrus and then cannulated through the jugular vein or cannulated and hypophysectomized during the late morning or early afternoon of pro-oestrus. Comparison of patterns of plasma FSH in hypophysectomized and intact rats after i.v. injection of 0·5 μg FSH at 17.00 h suggested that exogenous FSH stimulated the release of endogenous FSH in less than 5 h. Intravenous LH (2 μg at 16.00 and at 18.00 h) raised the level of FSH in plasma between 2 and 6 h after the first injection of LH. Both gonadotrophins stimulated FSH release by the pituitary gland during the morning of oestrus. Comparison of patterns of plasma FSH in hypophysectomized and intact rats after i.v. injection of 0·25 or 0·05 μg FSH at 14.00 h suggested that the latency between FSH injection and stimulation of some FSH release by the pituitary gland is as short as 2 h. Intravenous LH (3,4 or 9 μg) at 14.00 h did not increase the level of FSH in plasma within 2 h and was only minimally effective in raising the level within 4 h. Intravenous LH (2 μg at 16.00 and at 18.00 h) on the afternoon of dioestrus day 2 was nearly as effective in increasing the levels of FSH in plasma as it was when administered to pro-oestrous rats. This procedure did not raise the plasma levels of FSH in rats used on dioestrus day 1. The results suggest that in the phenobarbitone-blocked, pro-oestrous rat (1) a small increase (less than that observed spontaneously) in plasma rat FSH during pro-oestrus is effective in stimulating FSH release by the pituitary gland, (2) an increase in plasma rat FSH can exert positive feedback on its own secretion within 2 h and (3) a large increase in plasma rat LH is not very effective in increasing the plasma level of FSH over a period of 4 h. The results also suggest that the spontaneous increase in plasma levels of FSH and, to a lesser extent, of LH is involved in causing the selective phase of FSH release which occurs during late pro-oestrus and the morning of oestrus, and that LH and FSH act differently, but not necessarily by way of a different mechanism, to stimulate release of FSH by the pituitary gland.
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