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DJ Phillips
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DM de Kretser
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A Pfeffer
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WN Chie
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LG Moore
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The effects on plasma follistatin concentrations of an inflammatory episode, induced by the intrathoracic injection of yeast, were examined in growing lambs; this model results in acute loss of appetite, food intake and liveweight and the activation of the acute-phase pathway for several weeks as adjudged by the production of haptoglobin and other acute-phase proteins. In these animals (n = 8) there was a biphasic response in follistatin concentrations, with an initial 200% increase (P < 0.001) in follistatin within 24 h of injection of yeast. Thereafter, follistatin concentrations were depressed to 70% of pretreatment levels 48 h after injection (P < 0.01), followed by a gradual recovery of concentrations to pretreatment values. In another group of lambs (n = 16) that were feed-restricted to mimic the reduced food intakes and liveweight changes in the yeast-injected group, plasma follistatin was also reduced to around 70% of pretreatment levels (P < 0.01) within 1 day of the dietary regimen being implemented, followed by a gradual return to pretreatment values as food intakes were increased. Plasma follistatin correlated significantly (r = 0.57, P < 0.0001) with food intake, but not with liveweight changes. Plasma follistatin concentrations were unchanged in a third group fed ad libitum (n = 8), except during two periods when food intakes were significantly (P < 0.05) reduced, when follistatin concentrations also decreased (P < 0.01). Plasma follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentrations in the three groups of lambs were not significantly affected by the treatment regimes or changes in follistatin concentrations. These findings indicate that peripheral follistatin concentrations are modulated by both inflammatory and nutritional mechanisms, and that significant fluctuations in follistatin levels can occur without detectable perturbations in FSH secretion.

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LG Moore
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W Ng Chie
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NL Hudson
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KP McNatty
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The glycoprotein hormone FSH comes in many different isoforms. In humans and rats the charges of the FSH isoforms vary with reproductive state and these affect the half-life of FSH in plasma. In this study we examined the charge heterogeneity of FSH in pituitary extracts from sheep with different reproductive states. Also the half-life of clearance of pituitary FSH from the different reproductive states was determined in mice. Pituitaries were collected from: anoestrous, luteal phase, follicular phase, early-pregnant and late-pregnant ewes, ewe lambs, ram lambs, rams during the breeding and non-breeding seasons and wethers (5 per group). After extraction, FSH isoforms were fractionated by HPLC anion exchange chromatography. The volume at which half of the FSH had eluted from the ion exchange column was determined (HP(50)). It was found that FSH isoforms from ewes (HP(50)=96.7+/- 1.3 ml (s.e.m. )) eluted later (P<0.01) than those from rams (HP(50)=82.3+/-1.3 ml) indicating that FSH isoforms in the ewes were more acidic than those from rams. There was a seasonal difference in ewes, with ewes in anoestrus (HP(50)=101.6+/-2.6 ml) having more-acidic (P<0.01) FSH isoforms than the ewes during the oestrous cycle (HP(50)=95.3+/-0.7 ml). There was an effect of age, with the FSH isoforms from cycling ewes (HP(50)=95.3+/- 0.7 ml) being more acidic (P<0.01) than those from ewe lambs (HP(50)=88.3+/-1.9 ml). There was an effect of pregnancy, with late-pregnant ewes (HP(50)=107.3+/- 1.6 ml) having more-acidic FSH isoforms (P<0.05) than those from anoestrous ewes (HP(50)=101.6+/-2.6 ml) and there was an effect of castration with the breeding season rams (HP(50)=80.7+/-1.4 ml) having more-acidic (P<0.05) FSH isoforms than wethers (HP(50)=74.0+/-0.5 ml). The half-life of pituitary FSH from animals in the different reproductive states was found to be negatively correlated with HP(50) (r(2)=0.56, P<0.01). The FSH isoforms from wethers were the least acidic and had the longest half-lives. Collectively, these findings show that in sheep, age, sex and reproductive state are all factors which influence the forms of FSH that are extracted from the pituitary gland. Moreover, these results demonstrate that FSH from sheep with the most-acidic FSH isoforms have the shortest half-life in plasma.

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