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Csilla Ruzsas
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Patrizia Limonta
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L. Martini
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The role of brain serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) in the control of LH, FSH and prolactin secretion was studied in two groups of experimental animals: intact adult male rats and ovariectomized adult female rats.

5-Hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP), a precursor of serotonin synthesis, and fluoxetine, a specific inhibitor of 5-HT uptake, were given either alone or together. 5-Hydroxytryptophan (50 mg/kg) was administered intraperitoneally and fluoxetine (20 μg/rat) was given into one of the lateral ventricles of the brain. Neither 5-HTP nor fluoxetine given alone affected LH secretion but combined treatment with the two drugs elicited a significant increase in serum LH levels in both intact male and ovariectomized female rats. Fluoxetine and 5-HTP, alone or together, did not modify FSH secretion in either kind of animal. In intact males and in ovariectomized females, 5-HTP induced a significant increase in prolactin release; fluoxetine alone was ineffective. In male animals treated with fluoxetine plus 5-HTP, serum prolactin levels increased but such an increase was lower than that found in the animals treated only with 5-HTP. In ovariectomized rats, the combined treatment induced an increase in serum prolactin levels similar to that found in animals treated with 5-HTP alone.

These data suggested that brain serotonin exerts a stimulating effect on LH secretion in both intact male and ovariectomized rats, but that it does not play any role in the control of FSH release in either kind of animal and that central serotoninergic pathways participate in the stimulating control of prolactin release from the anterior pituitary gland. However, some of the data also suggested the possibility of the existence in the brain of serotoninergic systems inhibiting prolactin secretion.

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Patrizia Limonta
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Roberto Maggi
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Luciano Martini
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Flavio Piva
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Thermal lesions were placed in the subcommissural organ (SCO) of female rats with normal cycles and long-term ovariectomized rats. In normal female rats SCO lesions disrupted the oestrous cycle in more than half of the animals, the majority of which entered a state of prolonged dioestrus. In these animals, serum gonadotrophin levels were similar to those of rats with regular cycles on day 2 of dioestrus. In animals in which the oestrous cycle was maintained, a delayed LH surge occurred on the day of pro-oestrus and the pro-oestrous FSH surge was absent. The usual increase in FSH on the day of oestrus was present. Lesions in the SCO did not change the high gonadotrophin levels typical of ovariectomized animals.

These results suggested that the SCO may play a role in the control of the cyclic but not the tonic release of the gonadotrophins. In particular, it appears that the SCO might be involved in the regulation of the hypersecretion of FSH during the day of pro-oestrus.

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