To study the time-course of release and synthesis of LH, FSH and prolactin, anterior pituitary glands from ovariectomized rats were incubated for different time-intervals between 0 and 4 h.
Comparable patterns of release and synthesis of LH and FSH as a function of the incubation time were observed. It was possible to distinguish two phases in the profiles of secretion of both gonadotrophins. During the first phase, from 0–2 h, release was associated with a corresponding decrease of the hormone concentrations within the gland but no overall changes in total LH and FSH production. During the second phase, between 2 and 4 h, a progressive reaccumulation of both gonadotrophins occurred in spite of the continuous release of hormones into the medium, reflecting formation of new immunoassayable material. These results suggest that the increased synthesis ensues as a secondary phenomenon arising from the release of the hormones from the tissue. The time-course of release and synthesis of prolactin showed different dynamics during the course of incubation. High levels of prolactin were released and synthesized when the adenohypophysis was incubated in vitro. Considerably larger amounts of this hormone were found in the medium than in the tissue from the first hour of incubation. After a lag of about 40 min synthesis of prolactin was increased in parallel with its release. This led to the assumption that both prolactin synthesizing and releasing processes occurred simultaneously from the early stages of the incubation. Comparatively, prolactin-secreting cells had a very fast and LH-secreting cells a low rate of turnover; FSH-secreting cells were intermediate between the two.
These results indicate that (1) the increase in release of LH, FSH and prolactin into the medium precedes that of hormone synthesis and (2) the initial depletion of the pituitary gland as a result of hormone release could act as a stimulus for synthesis, leading to the reestablishment of hormonal storage levels.
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