Male farm-reared alligators were injected with mammalian FSH, LH, hCG, prolactin, or saline. A blood sample was taken immediately prior to injection of hormone and at 24 h postinjection. Testosterone concentrations in the plasma were then determined by radioimmunoassay. Only the alligators injected
Stress-induced suppression of testosterone secretion in male alligators
โ Scribed by Lance, Valentine A. ;Elsey, Ruth M.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 509 KB
- Volume
- 239
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-104X
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โฆ Synopsis
In order to test the effect of acute stress on gonadal hormone secretion in reptiles, six mature male alligators were captured, and a blood sample was taken within 5 min of capture. Additional blood samples were taken at timed intervals for up to 41 hr, and plasma testosterone and corticosterone were measured by radioimmunoassay. Plasma testosterone declined to 50% of the initial value by 4 hr and dropped to less than 10% of initial by 24 hr. Plasma corticosterone increased during the first 12 hr, declined at 24 hr, and rose again at 40 hr. Blood samples from male alligators collected in North and South Carolina, south Florida, and in south Louisiana in two consecutive breeding seasons were also assayed for testosterone and corticosterone. In these populations there were significant differences in mean plasma testosterone and corticosterone levels. Elevated corticosterone levels were consistently seen in alligators caught in traps and from which a blood sample was taken several hours later. Plasma testosterone, although consistently lower in trapped alligators, did not show a negative correlation with plasma corticosterone. Farm-reared alligators bled once, released, and bled again at 24 hr also showed a highly significant suppression of testosterone secretion. These results demonstrate that stress has a rapid and dramatic effect on testicular steroid secretion in both farm-reared and wild alligators.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The goal of this study was to characterize the mechanism by which hyperprolactinemia alters testosterone production in rat testicular interstitial cells (TICs). Hyperprolactinemia was induced by grafting 2 anterior pituitary (AP) glands under the subcapsular space of the kidney in experimental rats.