TIME-COURSE OF THYROID-HORMONE INVOLVEMENT IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ANESTRUS IN THE EWE

Citation
La. Thrun et al., TIME-COURSE OF THYROID-HORMONE INVOLVEMENT IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ANESTRUS IN THE EWE, Biology of reproduction, 55(4), 1996, pp. 833-837
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Reproductive Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00063363
Volume
55
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
833 - 837
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-3363(1996)55:4<833:TOTIIT>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
It is well established that the thyroid gland is essential for termina tion of seasonal reproductive activity in a variety of birds and mamma ls. In the present study, we examined when during the breeding season the thyroid exerts this effect in female sheep. Previous results sugge st that the presence of thyroid hormones during the first 4-6 wk (20-2 5%) of the breeding season is not sufficient for the neuroendocrine ch anges that lead to anestrus. We therefore hypothesized that thyroid ho rmone action is exerted at some point during the latter 75-80% of the breeding season. To test this hypothesis, ewes thyroidectomized early in the breeding season received replacement of thyroxine at various ti mes to create gaps during the mid- to late breeding season when thyroi d hormones were absent. We then examined the effect, if any, of this a bsence on development of seasonal neuroendocrine anestrus. Each ewe wa s ovariectomized and treated with a constant-release Silastic capsule containing estradiol. Serum concentrations of LH were used as an index of seasonal changes in reproductive neuroendocrine activity. We found that when thyroid hormones were removed for a 60-day period in mid- t o late breeding season (from mid-Oct. to late Dec., which is approxima tely 40% of the entire breeding season), anestrus still developed at t he normal time. We conclude, therefore, that thyroid hormones need not be present for much of the breeding season (mid-Sept. through late De c.) for anestrus to develop in the ewe. Rather, we postulate that thyr oid hormones need to be present for only a brief period of time near t he end of the breeding season for the neuroendocrine changes that lead to anestrus.