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Reproduction (2002) 123 827-835
DOI: 10.1530/rep.0.1230827
Copyright © 2002 Society for Reproduction and Fertility
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Articles

Production of inhibin A not B in rams: changes in plasma inhibin A during testis growth, and expression of inhibin/activin subunit mRNA and protein in adult testis

AS McNeilly, CJ Souza, DT Baird, IA Swanston, J McVerry, J Crawford, M Cranfield, and GA Lincoln

Previous studies have shown that changes in the plasma concentrations of immunoreactive inhibin measured by radioimmunoassay occur in parallel with growth and regression of the testes during a reproductive cycle in adult Soay rams induced by exposure to an artificial lighting regimen of alternating 16 week periods of long days and short days. With the development of new two-site ELISAs for sheep inhibin A and inhibin B, we have re-examined the relationship between FSH and dimeric, biologically active inhibin in the reproductive cycle in adult Soay rams. No signal was generated by sheep testicular extract, ram or ewe plasma, or sheep ovarian follicular fluid in the inhibin B ELISA. In contrast, ram plasma contained significant activity in the inhibin A ELISA, which diluted in parallel to the inhibin A standard, and was abolished by preincubation of ram plasma with monoclonal antibodies specific for the betaA, but not the betaB, subunit. These results indicate that the ram is the first adult male mammalian species identified to date in which the testes produce and secrete dimeric inhibin A and not inhibin B. Northern blot analysis and immunocytochemistry confirmed the presence of alpha, betaA and betaB inhibin/activin subunit mRNA and protein in the testes of adult rams. Changes in plasma inhibin A concentrations occurred in parallel with the growth and regression of the testes during the long day: short day: long day lighting regimen in adult Soay rams, confirming our previous observations with immunoreactive inhibin. During the growth phase of the testes in the first 8 weeks of exposure to short days there was a positive correlation between plasma FSH and inhibin A concentrations, indicating that during this phase the secretion of inhibin A is stimulated by FSH and that inhibin A did not act as a negative feedback hormone on FSH secretion. From week 8.5 to week 16.0 of exposure to short days, there was a negative correlation between FSH and testosterone concentrations, but not inhibin, indicating that when inhibin concentrations are high, testosterone acts as the negative regulator of FSH secretion. Thus, in intact adult rams, when the testes are fully active it appears that inhibin A may sensitize the pituitary to the negative feedback effects of testosterone, at which time they act synergistically to maintain plasma concentrations of FSH.


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