Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Gonadal Axis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Gonadal Axis

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Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Gonadal Axis Dr. D. Johnson Assoc. Professor UNECOM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Gonadal Axis


1
Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Gonadal Axis
  • Dr. D. Johnson
  • Assoc. Professor
  • UNECOM

2
PARENT Easiest Job in the World to GetHardest
Job in the World to do Right
3
The HPG Axis
  • The HPG axis in the female.
  • Important to recognize that reproductive problems
    in male or female usually occur at one of 3
    levels
  • Hypothalamic
  • Pituitary
  • Gonad

4
Hypothalamo-Pituitary Connections
  • Arcuate, medial preoptic, and paraventricular
    hypothalamic neurons send projections to the
    median emminence, which in turn drains into the
    hypophysial portal veins.
  • These nuclei release GnRH into the median
    emminence in pulses, where it is then shunted
    directly to the anterior pituitary via the
    hypophysial portal veins.
  • In the anterior pituitary, GnRH binds surface
    receptors on cells which produce and release the
    gonadotrophins FSH and LH. Thus, it is a
    neurohormone.

5
Hypothalamic GnRH
  • The decapeptide GnRH is derived from
    posttranslation processing of a 92amino acid
    (AA) pre-pro-GnRH. The first 23 AA is a signal
    peptide and the last 56 AA is known as
    GnRH-associated protein (GAP).
  • GnRH is encoded from a single gene located on the
    short arm of chromosome 8.
  • Serum levels of GnRH are difficult to obtain due
    to its short half-life (2-4 min) and nearly
    complete confinement to the hypophyseal-portal
    blood supply.

6
More on GnRH..
  • So far, three types of GnRH have been isolated in
    humans GnRH type I, GnRH type II and GnRH type
    III.
  • GnRH type I (10 amino acidsreferred to from
    hereon simply as GnRH) is the classical
    hypothalamic reproductive neuroendocrine factor
    that works in the anterior pituitary.
  • The physiological meaning of the multiple
    isoforms of GnRH in humans has not been well
    elucidated.

7
GnRH Receptor
  • A single GnRH receptor has been identified in
    humans, which binds with GnRH.
  • GnRH binds with high affinity to these receptors,
    which are located on the cell surface of anterior
    pituitary gonadotrophs. GnRH receptors are 7
    transmembrane cell surface G protein-coupled
    receptors.
  • Receptor binding activates phospholipase C. This
    leads to the activation of several second
    messenger molecules, the most important being
    diacylglycerol (DG) and inositol
    1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3).

8
Gonadotrophin INHIBITORY Hormone (GnIH)
  • Researchers at the University of California,
    Berkeley reported in the February 14, 2006
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    (vol. 103, no. 7, pp. 2410-2415) that they have
    discovered a GnIH peptide in mammals (rats mice,
    and hamsters).
  • If the new finding is mirrored in humans, it
    would offer physicians another means of tweaking
    the reproductive system to fix problems ranging
    from infertility to precocious puberty.

9
Pituitary FSH / LH
  • Both FSH and LH are composed of polypeptide chain
    subunits. These subunits, termed ? and ?? are
    coded for by separate genes.
  • They differ only in the composition of the b
    subunit.

10
Pituitary FSH / LH
  • Both FSH and LH are glycoslyated with various
    sugar residues (oligosaccharides with sialic acid
    residues).
  • FSH has more associated sugars, it is cleared
    more slowly from the serum than LH.

11
Circhoral Oscillator
  • It is now a well-established fact that GnRH is
    released into the hypophysial portal blood in
    pulses, typically one pulse every 30 to 60
    minutes.
  • Surgical techniques perfected in the 1980s
    allowed cannulation of the hypophysial portal
    blood in primates, and measurement of GnRH
    levels.
  • However, it is not well known which parts of the
    brain are responsible for causing the pulsatile
    release of GnRH from hypothalamic nuclei.

12
Clinical Importance of Pulsatility
  • Pulsatile release of GnRH results in pulsatile
    release of stored FSH / LH first, then newly
    synthesized FSH and LH.
  • If GnRH binds its receptor on pituitary
    gonadotrophs chronically instead of in pulses,
    secondary messengers are uncoupled, receptors
    involute, and both synthesis and release of FSH
    and LH is halted.

13
GnRH Analogues
  • GnRH agonists were initially designed to provide
    agents with more potent stimulatory action than
    native GnRH. Their prolonged administration,
    however, is used clinically to take advantage of
    the fact that shutting down FSH and LH release
    can lead to decreased production of gonadal
    steroids (ie, chemical castration).
  • This is useful in the treatment of several sex
    steroid-dependent conditions (androgen-dependent
    prostate cancers, estrogen-dependent breast
    cancers, endometriosis).
  • More recently, GnRH antagonists inducing
    immediate reduction of gonadotrophin levels have
    been introduced in clinical practice.

14
CNS Disease / Injuries and Reproduction
  • GnRH is considered the most important final
    common mediator on all influences on reproduction
    conveyed through the brain.
  • Therefore, disorders of the brain can often lead
    to infertility problems.

15
The Gonads
  • We have now seen the importance of the
    hypothalamo-pituitary axis in initiating the
    process of reproduction by releasing the
    gonadotrophins.
  • The next step is to investigate the action of the
    gonadatrophins at the level of the female (ovary)
    and male (testis) gonad itself.
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