Artículos de revistas
Secretory patterns of leptin and luteinizing hormone in food-restricted young female sheep
Fecha
2004Registro en:
Biological Research, Volumen 37, Issue 3, 2018, Pages 371-384
07169760
10.4067/S0716-97602004000300003
Autor
Recabarren, Sergio E.
Lobos, Alejandro
Torres, Verónica
Oyarzo, Roberto
Sir Petermann, Teresa
Institución
Resumen
Leptin, the product of the ob gene, has been proposed as a metabolic signal that regulates the secretion of GnRH/LH. This may be critical during prepubertal development to synchronize information about energy stores and the secretion of GnRH/LH. This study aimed to assess the effect of food restriction on the episodic secretion of leptin and LH in young female sheep. Five 20-week-old prepubertal females were fed a low-level diet for 10 weeks to maintain the body weight. Control females of the same age received food ad libitum. Blood samples were collected at 10-min intervals for six hours at 20, 26, and 30 weeks of age, and plasma leptin, LH, insulin and cortisol concentrations were measured. In the control group, no changes were found in pulsatile LH secretion characteristics. Mean LH concentrations and LH amplitude were lower in the food-restricted group than in the control group at 26 and 30 weeks of age. In the control group, pulsatile Ieptin secretion did not change. When compared