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. 1986 May;176(1):33-52.
doi: 10.1002/aja.1001760104.

The effects of orchidectomy and replacement therapy on the ultrastructure and gonadotropin-releasing hormone content of the median eminence of the rat

The effects of orchidectomy and replacement therapy on the ultrastructure and gonadotropin-releasing hormone content of the median eminence of the rat

W C Beckman Jr. Am J Anat. 1986 May.

Abstract

The effects of 2 weeks of orchidectomy and replacement therapy with testosterone upon the content and distribution of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in the median eminence were determined by means of radioimmunoassay and electron microscopy. Photographic montages were prepared from electron micrographs of the lateral median eminence at the point of deepest invagination of the tuberoinfundibular sulcus. Morphometric analysis of photographs of tissues immunohistochemically stained for GnRH was performed to determine changes in the volume density of GnRH-containing axon profiles following the experimental treatments. A decrease in GnRH content after orchidectomy was observed both by morphometric analysis of axon volume density and radioimmunoassay of total GnRH content. Testosterone treatment of orchidectomized animals prevented the postorchidectomy loss of GnRH. Morphometric analysis of conventional electron micrographs revealed an increase in the number of axons containing no dense-core vesicles following orchidectomy, but no decrease in volume density of the neuropil. The results indicate that the change in volume density of immunostained axons was related to the loss of immunostainable dense-core vesicles and not to a change in the size or number of axons. The area corresponding to the location of the highest concentration of GnRH-containing axons was observed to be largely avascular and separated from the vessels of the tuberoinfundibular sulcus by a "border zone" composed of glial foot processes. The unique morphology of the GnRH area has suggested the name "compact zone" to distinguish it from the palisade zone with which it is continuous medially. GnRH axons in this region are probably part of a tract extending farther caudally rather than a terminal field.

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