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DR Mann
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MA Akinbami
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KG Gould
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K Paul
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K Wallen
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In a 5-year longitudinal study, we examined the effect of disrupting the neonatal activity of the pituitary-testicular axis on the sexual development of male rhesus monkeys. Animals in a social group under natural lighting conditions were treated with a GnRH antagonist (antide), antide and androgen, or both vehicles, from birth until 4 months of age. In antide-treated neonates, serum LH and testosterone were near or below the limits of detection throughout the neonatal period. Antide + androgen-treated neonates had subnormal serum LH, but above normal testosterone concentrations during the treatment period. From 6 to 36 months of age, serum LH and testosterone were near or below the limits of detection. Ten of 12 control animals reached puberty during the breeding season of their 4th year, compared with five of 10 antide- and three of eight antide + androgen-treated animals. Although matriline rank was balanced across treatment groups at birth, a disruption within the social group during year 2 resulted in a marginally lower social ranking of the two treated groups compared with the controls. More high (78%) than low (22%) ranking animals reached puberty during year 4. During the breeding season of that year, serum LH, testosterone and testicular volume were positively correlated with social rank. Thus the lower social rank of treated animals may have contributed to the subnormal numbers of these animals reaching puberty during year 4. However, of those animals achieving puberty during year 4, the pattern of peripubertal changes in serum testosterone and testicular volume differed between control and antide-treated animals. The results appear to suggest that the disruption of normal activity of the neonatal pituitary--testicular axis retarded sexual development, but that social rank is a key regulatory factor in setting the timing of sexual maturation in male rhesus monkeys. The effect of neonatal treatment with antide and low social rank on sexual development could not be reversed by neonatal exposure to greater than normal concentrations of androgen.

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