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Reproduction (2004) 128 13-23
DOI: 10.1530/rep.1.00195
Copyright © 2004 Society for Reproduction and Fertility
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REVIEW

Intra-pituitary regulation of gonadotrophs in male rodents and primates

Stephen J Winters and Joseph P Moore

Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Diabetes, University of Louisville, ACB-A3G11, 550 Jackson Street, Louisville, Kentucky 40202, USA

Correspondence should be addressed to Stephen J Winters; Email: sjwint01{at}louisville.edu

Paracrine and autocrine regulation is well established in many organs including the gonads, but the notion of communication among pituitary cells is a relatively new concept. The FSH-ß and GnRH-receptor genes are up-regulated by pituitary activin and down-regulated by pituitary follistatin, and circulating inhibin disrupts this local regulation by functioning as an endogenous competitor of the activin receptor. Activin and follistatin production by folliculostellate cells may play a central role in these responses. {alpha}-Subunit expression is maintained at high levels in the absence of GnRH through unknown mechanisms. There is evidence that the intra-pituitary regulation of FSH-ß and GnRH-receptor gene expression may activate pubertal maturation in male rats. Finally, there are marked differences in follistatin expression and its regulation by GnRH and androgens in male primates and rats that appear to explain species differences in the differential secretion of FSH and LH, although the physiological significance of these differences is not yet known.




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