Animals (Dec 2022)

Variation in Hypothalamic GnIH Expression and Its Association with <i>GnRH</i> and <i>Kiss1</i> during Pubertal Progression in Male Rhesus Monkeys (<i>Macaca mulatta</i>)

  • Hira Zubair,
  • Muhammad Saqib,
  • Muhammad Noman Khan,
  • Shazia Shamas,
  • Shahzad Irfan,
  • Muhammad Shahab

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12243533
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 24
p. 3533

Abstract

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Modulation of pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion across postnatal development in higher primates is not fully understood. While gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH) is reported to suppress reproductive axis activity in birds and rodents, little is known about the developmental trajectory of GnIH expression in rhesus monkeys throughout the pubertal transition. This study was aimed at examining the variation in GnIH immunoreactivity (-ir) and associated changes among GnIH, GnRH, and Kiss1 mRNA expression in the hypothalamus of infant, juvenile, prepubertal, and adult male rhesus monkeys. The brains from rhesus macaques were collected from infancy until adulthood and were examined using immunofluorescence and RT-qPCR. The mean GnIH-ir was found to be significantly higher in prepubertal animals (p p p GnIH mRNA expression was the highest at the prepubertal stage (p GnIH-GnRH (p GnIH-Kiss1 (p < 0.001) expression. Our findings suggest a role for GnIH in the prepubertal suppression of the reproductive axis, with disinhibition of the adult reproductive axis occurring through decreases in GnIH. This pattern of expression suggests that GnIH may be a viable target for the development of novel therapeutics and contraceptives for humans.

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