Publication | Closed Access
Sexual Differentiation of Pituitary Function: Apparent Difference between Primates and Rodents
182
Citations
23
References
1973
Year
FertilityFemale Reproductive FunctionHormone SecretionReproductive BiologyMenstrual CycleSexual DifferentiationEmbryologyPituitary GlandNeuroendocrine MechanismSex DifferencesPublic HealthApparent DifferenceInfertilityPituitary FunctionEndocrine MechanismBehavioral NeuroscienceCyclic Gonadotropin SecretionBehavioral NeuroendocrinologyNervous SystemEndocrinologyOvarian HormoneDevelopmental BiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyMedicineReproductive HormoneGonadotropin Biology
Surges in luteinizing hormone secretion resembling those which occur spontaneously during the menstrual cycle were induced by acute elevations in circulating estrogen concentrations in both male and female rhesus monkeys gonadectomized in adulthood. These experiments demonstrate that in primates, in contrast to rodents, exposure of the hypothalamohypophyseal unit to androgens throughout fetal and postnatal development does not prevent the differentiation of the control system that governs cyclic gonadotropin secretion.
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