Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone (GnRH) is a neuropeptide hormone produced in the hypothalamus of horses. It is involved in the regulation of reproductive processes by stimulating the release of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) from the anterior pituitary gland. These hormones are key regulators of gonadal function, influencing processes such as estrus, ovulation, and spermatogenesis. The study of GnRH in horses includes understanding its physiological roles, mechanisms of action, and its application in managing reproductive health. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the function, regulation, and clinical applications of Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone in equine reproduction.
Johnson AL, Becker SE, Roma ML.Standard bred mares that were cycling normally were treated beginning on Days 9 or 10 of the oestrous cycle with repeated pulses of GnRH (20 micrograms/h) and/or a single injection of prostaglandin (PG)F-2 alpha (alfaprostol, 3 mg), and were subsequently bled and palpated daily until the next ovulation. GnRH treatment increased serum concentrations of LH and progesterone at 4 days after the start of treatment compared to controls. The combination of PGF-2 alpha + GnRH treatment resulted in an immediate decline in serum progesterone values, and subsequently decreased the interval to next ovulat...
Irvine CH, Alexander SL.Pituitary venous blood was collected by a painless nonsurgical cannulation method from five ambulatory stallions at 5-min intervals for 5-6 h during the breeding season. In four adult stallions, statistical analysis showed that pulses of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and LH were coincident (P less than 0.01), as were pulses of FSH and LH (P less than 0.05). Furthermore, the patterns of changes in concentration of FSH and LH were highly correlated in each of the four stallions. However, seemingly ineffective pulses of GnRH were also observed, with 28% of GnRH pulses failing to induce a...
Garza F, Thompson DL, Mitchell PS, Wiest JJ.Five lighthorse mares were actively immunized against gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA) to study the involvement of GnRH in luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion following ovariectomy (OVX) and after administration of testosterone propionate (TP). Five mares immunized against BSA served as controls. Immunizations were started on November 1, and OVX was performed in June (d 1). All mares were treated with TP from d 50 to 59 after OVX. On the day of OVX, concentrations of LH were lower (P less than .05) in GnRH-immu...
Alexander SL, Irvine CH.We have developed a non-surgical technique for long-term collection of pituitary venous blood which consists of slightly diluted hypophysial portal blood into which pituitary hormones have been secreted. In these experiments jugular and pituitary venous blood samples were collected from five unmedicated, ambulatory mares at 5-min intervals for 2-6 h on 11 occasions during the 6 days surrounding the ovulatory LH peak. Jugular blood only was collected from another five periovulatory mares without pituitary cannulae. The duration of oestrus was similar in mares with and without pituitary cannulae...
Wiest JJ, Thompson DL, McNeill-Weist DR, Garza F.Twenty ovariectomized pony mares were used to determine if dihydrotestosterone propionate (DHTP) administration, with or without estradiol benzoate (EB) pretreatment, would have the same effects on follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion as testosterone propionate (TP) administration. All mares were given an initial injection of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) to characterize their LH and FSH response, and then two groups of mares (n = 4/group) were administered EB (22 micrograms/kg of body weight), two groups were administered vehicle (safflower oil) an...
Johnson AL.A study was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse infusion to stimulate follicular development and induce ovulation in seasonally anestrous standardbred mares. Seventeen mares were selected for use in this experiment, on the basis of a previous normal reproductive history, and were housed under a photoperiod of 8L:16D beginning one week prior to the start of the experiment (second week in January). Mares were infused with 20 micrograms (n = 7) or 2 micrograms (n = 6) GnRH/h, or were subjected to photoperiod treatment only (controls, n = 4). Seru...
Minoia P, Mastronardi M.THE majority of non-pregnant mares pass through winter and
early spring in reproductive quiescence or anoestrus. True
anoestrus begins when day length decreases to less than 10.5 h
(Palmer, Driancourt and Ortavant 1982) and involves gradual
change in behaviour, hormone secretion patterns and follicular
dynamics. The length of anoestrus differs according to the
breed, latitude and management and may extend to seven or
eight months (Ginther 1974). It sometimes persists well into the
normal breeding season, especially in mares in poor physical
condition (Allen 1977).
In mares, as in oth...
Silvia PJ, Squires EL, Nett TM.Four groups of mares, representing anestrus (AN; n = 8), early transition (ET; n = 7), late transition (LT; n = 8) and estrus (EST; n = 12) were used to examine release of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) after a bolus injection of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) during the transition from anestrus into the breeding season. Estrous mares received GnRH on d 2 or 3 of estrus in the cycle immediately preceding slaughter. Anestrous, ET and LT mares received GnRH exactly 1 wk prior to slaughter. A single injection of GnRH (Sigma LHRH, L-0507, 2.0 micrograms/kg b...
Lothrop CD, Henton JE, Cole BB, Nolan HL.Serum prolactin concentration was determined before and after TRH administration to normal mares at 10 months of gestation, 2 and 4 months post partum and during a -7- to +14-day peri-parturient period. The serum prolactin concentration increased significantly (P less than 0.05) at 15, 30 and 60 min after TRH administration in the normal mares regardless of the season of the year, pregnancy or lactation status. However, during the periparturient period, the basal prolactin concentration was increased 4-fold and there was only a marginal increase after TRH administration. Of 9 agalactic mares, ...
Sharp DC, Grubaugh WR.Push-pull perfusion was used to study GnRH secretory ability of the hypothalamus in anoestrous, transitional, dioestrous and oestrous Pony mares. The technique involved placement of a concentric (tube within a tube) cannula into the area of the medial basal hypothalamus and perfusing a carrier medium (artificial cerebrospinal fluid) through the inner tube whilst aspirating from the outer tube so that the flow rate within the hypothalamic tissue was essentially constant. The perfusion rate was 0.5 ml/10 min and samples were collected at 10-min intervals for 10-15 h. The carrier medium, which co...
Safir JM, Loy RG, Fitzgerald BP.To investigate the hypothesis that the onset of the breeding season in the mare may be due to a daylength-induced seasonal increase in LHRH pulse frequency, 5 mares were immunized against LHRH. Beginning 1 December, 5 immunized and 5 untreated control mares were exposed to an abrupt, artificial increase in daylength (16L:8D) to advance the onset of the breeding season. In control mares ovulation occurred 49.6 +/- 3.5 (s.e.m.) days later (18 January), whereas in 3/5 immunized mares ovulation had not occurred by 1 April. In the remaining 2 mares, although ovulation occurred once (Mare 79) or twi...
Hyland JH, Wright PJ, Clarke IJ, Carson RS, Langsford DA, Jeffcott LB.In Exp. 1, 30 Standardbred mares in deep seasonal anoestrus were divided into 3 equal groups and treated with 0, 50 (G50) or 100 (G100) ng GnRH kg-1h-1 for 28 days via osmotic minipumps. Ovulation occurred in 0/10, 3/10 and 7/10 mares respectively (P less than 0.05). Plasma GnRH profiles (Days -6, 0, 2, 6, 12, 20, 28 and 34 relative to pump insertion) were dose-dependent (P less than 0.01) and peaked on Day 12 of infusion. Mean daily plasma LH concentrations were biphasic in treated mares that ovulated, with LH peaks occurring around Day 6 and Days 16-20. By contrast, in treated mares that did...
Allen WR, Sanderson MW, Greenwood RE, Ellis DR, Crowhurst JS, Simpson DJ, Rossdale PD.A total of 18 experimental pony and 136 commercial maiden, barren and foaling Thoroughbred mares in seasonal or lactation-related anoestrus were injected subcutaneously with 1 or 2 slow-release D,L-lactide-glycolide co-polymer implants impregnated with 0.9 or 1.8 mg of the potent GnRH analogue, ICI 118 630, to give a daily release of, respectively, 30 or 60 micrograms analogue for 28 days; 32 of the Thoroughbred mares were also given a daily oral dose of 27.5 mg allyl trenbolone for 5 days after injection of the implant. Thirteen pony (76%) and 120 Thoroughbred (88%) mares ovulated 3-18 days a...
Jöchle W, Irvine CH, Alexander SL, Newby TJ.Nine mares received cannulae to collect blood from the pituitary venous outflow in the intercavernous sinus (ICS) and the jugular vein; in 4 mares, only jugular cannulae were used. Those 4 mares and 3 of the mares with cannulae in both positions received 7.5 mg luprostiol i.m. and 1 mare with both cannulae was treated with 3.75 mg uprostiol i.v. Blood samples were kept before and after treatment at 2-, 5- or 10-min intervals and concentrations of LH, FSH and GnRH were determined by RIA. Treatments resulted in an immediate sharp rise of LH and FSH in ICS and jugular blood samples within 2-10 mi...
Johnson AL.Cycling standardbred mares were infused with saline or 20 micrograms gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in a pulsatile pattern (one 5-sec pulse/h, 2 h or 4 h) beginning on Day 16 of the estrous cycle. Although serum concentrations of luteinizing hormone (LH) increased significantly earlier in all three GnRH-treated groups (within one day of the initiation of infusion) compared to saline-infused controls, there were no differences in peak periovulatory LH concentrations among treatments (overall mean +/- SEM, 8.98 +/- 0.55 ng/ml). The number of days from the start of treatment to ovulation w...
Silvia PJ, Squires EL, Nett TM.Four groups of mares, representing anestrus (AN; n = 8), early transition (ET; n = 7), late transition (LT; n = 8) and estrus (EST; n = 12) were used to examine changes in the hypothalamus and anterior pituitary during the period of transition from winter anestrus into the breeding season. Mares were of mixed breeding, between the ages of 3 and 20 years, and had shown normal patterns of estrous behavior and ovulation during the breeding season previous to this experiment. Hypothalamic content of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and anterior pituitary content of luteinizing hormone (LH) an...
Michel TH, Rossdale PD, Cash RS.Plasma progesterone levels were measured daily to determine the accuracy of diagnosing ovulation by rectal palpation carried out every other day; 81.5 per cent mares injected with human chorionic gonadotrophin showed increases of progesterone more than 1 ng/ml by 72 h after injection compared with 65 per cent of mares injected with gonadotrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) or saline. Mating at ovulation achieved a 74 per cent pregnancy rate in mares given hCG compared with 50 per cent given GnRH and 45 per cent controls. Diagnosis of ovulation per rectum on the basis of a pit in the ovarian surfa...
Garza F, Thompson DL, French DD, Wiest JJ, St George RL, Ashley KB, Jones LS, Mitchell PS, McNeill DR.Five lighthorse mares were actively immunized against gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) to determine the relative importance of this hypothalamic hormone in the secretion of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). Five mares immunized against the conjugation protein served as controls. Mares were initially immunized in November and received secondary immunizations 4 wk later, and then at 6-wk intervals until ovariectomy in June. All mares immunized against GnRH exhibited an increase (p less than 0.01) in the binding of tritiated GnRH by plasma, an indication that a...
Alexander SL, Irvine CH.Luteinizing hormone release induced by a range of small (3.3-33 micrograms) and large (300-500 micrograms) i.v. doses of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) was measured in acyclic (n = 4), luteal phase (n = 3) and follicular phase (n = 5) mares and compared with endogenously generated LH pulses in the same reproductive states. Extrapolation from log-linear dose-response curves showed that an LH pulse comparable to an endogenous one would be simulated by i.v. injection of 7.0 (n = 4) and 4.1 (n = 6) micrograms GnRH in luteal and follicular phase mares respectively; a much smaller dose than ...
Garza F, Thompson DL, St George RL, French DD.In Exp. 1, 16 long-term ovariectomized pony mares were used to determine the effects of treatment with estradiol benzoate (EB) and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) benzoate alone, and in combination, on secretion of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) in daily blood samples and after three consecutive injections of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH). Administration of EB alone, or in combination with DHT, every other day for 11 d reduced (P less than .05) concentrations of FSH and increased (P less than .05) concentrations of LH in daily blood samples, and increased (P ...
Johnson AL.Four seasonally anestrous mares (Standardbred), housed under a nonstimulatory photoperiod of 8 hours light:16 hours dark, were administered gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in a pulsatile pattern (50 or 250 micrograms of GnRH/hour) for 8 to 18 days during February and March 1985. Treatment with GnRH, irrespective of dose or month, induced an increase in serum luteinizing hormone from a mean pretreatment value typical of anestrus (0.58 +/- 0.02 ng/ml +/- SE) to 10.84 +/- 1.27 ng/ml on day 8 of GnRH treatment. Ovulation in the 4 mares occurred 8.8 +/- 0.7 days after the initiation of pulsat...
Thompson DL, Garza F, Ashley KB, Wiest JJ.Anestrous lighthorse mares were treated in December with dihydrotestosterone (DHT; 150 micrograms/kg of body weight), progesterone (P; 164 micrograms/kg), both DHT and P (DHT+P), testosterone (T; 150 micrograms/kg), or vehicle (n = 4/group). Daily blood sampling was started on Day 1, and on Day 4 all mares were administered a pretreatment injection of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and were bled frequently to characterize the responses of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations. Treatment injections were given on Day 4 and then daily through Day 17...
Penzhorn BL, Gilbert RO.A 17-year-old Nooitgedacht mare was presented in mid-summer after failing to conceive during the previous 2 breeding seasons. The mare conceived to service during a PG-induced oestrus when synthetic GnRH was used to induce ovulation.
Hart PJ, Squires EL, Imel KJ, Nett TM.Seasonal changes in the hypothalamic-hypophyseal axis were investigated using tissue from 49 light-horse mares, of mixed breeding. Hypothalamic and pituitary tissues were collected at 5 intervals throughout the years 1981 and 1982, representing midbreeding season (July, n = 10), transition out of the breeding season (October, n = 11), midanestrus (December, n = 8), transition into the breeding season (March, n = 10), and again in the following midbreeding season (July, n = 10). The hypothalamic region was dissected into preoptic area, body and median eminence. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (G...
Reville-Moroz SI, Thompson DL, Archbald LF, Olsen LM.The in vitro incorporation of [3H]leucine into immunoprecipitable follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) was assessed for pituitaries from pony mares treated with testosterone propionate (TP) or oil (controls). Mares were treated every other day with TP (n = 4) at 350 micrograms/kg of body weight or with an equivalent volume of oil (n = 4). One day following the sixth injection of TP, each mare received an intravenous injection of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) at 1.0 micrograms/kg body weight and was bled frequently for 4 h. Treatment of mares with TP reduced F...
Thompson DL, Voelkel SA, Reville-Moroz SI, Godke RA, Derrick DJ.Effects of testosterone propionate (TP) treatment on plasma concentrations of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) before and after an injection of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) were studied using ovariectomized cows and pony mares. An initial injection of GnRH (1 microgram/kg of body weight) was followed by either TP treatment or control injections for 10 (cows) or 11 (ponies) d. A second GnRH injection was administered 1 d after the last TP or oil injection. Concentrations of LH and FSH were determined in samples of plasma taken before and after each GnRH i...
Thompson DL, Reville-Moroz SI, Derrick DJ, Walker MP.Sixteen intact cyclic mares were treated on the fourth day of estrus and then every other day for a total of six injections with 1) testosterone propionate, 2) dihydrotestosterone (DHT) benzoate, 3) estradiol (E2) benzoate or 4) safflower oil. Mares were given gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) on Day 3 of estrus (pretreatment) and again 24 h after the last steroid or oil injection. Treatment with testosterone propionate resulted in a greater (P less than 0.05) follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) response to the second injection of GnRH compared with all other treatments. Treatment with DHT ...
Tait AD, Hodge LC, Allen WR.The production of equilin and the other ring B-unsaturated estrogens by the pregnant mare is anomalous in that they are biosynthesised by a cholesterol-independent pathway. Fetal horse gonads were incubated with tritiated sodium acetate and radiochemically pure 3 beta-hydroxy-5,7-pregnadien-20-one and 3 beta-hydroxy-5,7-androstadien-17-one were isolated. A fetal gonad--placental system is proposed for equilin production, 3 beta-hydroxy-5,7-pregnadien-20-one being a precursor for 3 beta-hydroxy-5,7-androstadien-17-one in the fetal gonad and the latter being the precursor of equilin in the place...
Thompson DL, Reville SI, Derrick DJ.Five mature Quarterhorse mares were bled every 30 min for 25 h on day 50 of pregnancy to determine the short-term mode of secretion of equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG). Three other mares with persistent endometrial cups after abortion were administered gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH; 1.0 mug/kg of body weight) and were bled immediately prior to and at 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 180 and 240 min after GnRH. Concentrations of eCG in plasma of pregnant mares were constant over the 24-h period; the variation of each mare's individual values was no greater (P>.05) than the predicted random...
Milliken JE, Paccamonti DL, Shoemaker S, Green WH.A pseudohermaphrodite horse with aggressive stallion-like behavior and ambiguous external genitalia was gonadectomized. The hypoplastic gonads removed from the abdomen were confirmed by histologic examination to be testes. Examination of blood and fibroblasts revealed a 64,XX karyotype.
Garza F, Thompson DL, Mitchell PS, Wiest JJ.Five lighthorse mares were actively immunized against gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA) to study the involvement of GnRH in luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion following ovariectomy (OVX) and after administration of testosterone propionate (TP). Five mares immunized against BSA served as controls. Immunizations were started on November 1, and OVX was performed in June (d 1). All mares were treated with TP from d 50 to 59 after OVX. On the day of OVX, concentrations of LH were lower (P less than .05) in GnRH-immu...
Carnevale EM, Squires EL, Maclellan LJ, Alvarenga MA, Scott TJ.In some mares with lesions of the reproductive tract, embryo collection and survival rates are low, or collection of embryos is not feasible. For these mares, oocyte transfer has been proposed as a method to induce pregnancies. In this report, a method for oocyte transfer in mares and results of oocyte transfer performed over 2 breeding seasons, using mares with long histories of subfertility and various reproductive lesions, are described. Human chorionic gonadotropin or an implant containing a gonadotropin-releasing hormone analog was used to initiate follicular and oocyte maturation. Oocyte...
Thompson DL, Reville-Moroz SI, Derrick DJ, Walker MP.Sixteen intact cyclic mares were treated on the fourth day of estrus and then every other day for a total of six injections with 1) testosterone propionate, 2) dihydrotestosterone (DHT) benzoate, 3) estradiol (E2) benzoate or 4) safflower oil. Mares were given gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) on Day 3 of estrus (pretreatment) and again 24 h after the last steroid or oil injection. Treatment with testosterone propionate resulted in a greater (P less than 0.05) follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) response to the second injection of GnRH compared with all other treatments. Treatment with DHT ...
Irvine CH, Alexander SL.In an experiment conducted late in the physiological breeding season, 5 stallions were fitted with indwelling pituitary venous cannulae that permitted unobtrusive collection of blood coming from the pituitary and the hypothalamo-hypophyseal portal vessels. The next day, blood samples were collected at 5 min intervals for several hours while the stallions were resting. Pulses of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) occurred approximately once per hour. After this, an oestrous mare was brought into contact with each stallion for ...
Garza F, Thompson DL, St George RL, French DD.In Exp. 1, 16 long-term ovariectomized pony mares were used to determine the effects of treatment with estradiol benzoate (EB) and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) benzoate alone, and in combination, on secretion of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) in daily blood samples and after three consecutive injections of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH). Administration of EB alone, or in combination with DHT, every other day for 11 d reduced (P less than .05) concentrations of FSH and increased (P less than .05) concentrations of LH in daily blood samples, and increased (P ...
Naden J, Squires EL, Nett TM, Amann RP.The pituitary response to exogenous GnRH was studied in 8 colts of Quarter Horse phenotype from 32 to 96 weeks of age. Colts were from dams treated daily from Day 20 to 325 of gestation with (1) 2 ml neobee oil per 50 kg body weight (controls); or (2) 2 ml altrenogest per 50 kg body weight. GnRH challenges (5 micrograms/kg body weight) were administered every 8 weeks from 32 to 96 weeks of age to estimate pituitary content of LH. Blood samples were collected every 20 min for 4 h before GnRH and 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240 and 360 min after GnRH. Serum concentrations of LH and FSH were de...
Garcia MC, Ginther OJ.Three experiments were performed to study the luteinizing hormone (LH) and ovulatory responses to various doses and methods of administration of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in estrous pony mares and the influence of estradiol-17beta (E2-17beta) on LH response to GnRH treatment. In experiment 1, single injections of synthetic GnRH were subcutaneously given to 5 groups of estrous (day 2) mares (3 mares/group) on a body weight basis as follows: group A--isotonic saline solution; group B--GnRH, 0.14 mug/kg; group C--GnRH, 0.28 mug/kg; group D--KGnRH, 0.59 mug/kg; and group E--GnRH, 2.37 ...
Evans MJ, Irvine CH.Deeply acyclic (seasonally anovulatory) mares were treated with GnRH or a GnRH analogue to induce follicular development and ovulation. Courses of GnRH (3--4) were administered at approximately 10-day intervals to reproduce the gonadotrophin surges which precede ovulation in the normal cycle. Exogenous progesterone was administered in an attempt to reproduce the luteal phase pattern. Induced serum FSH concentrations were comparable to those causing follicular development in the normal cycle, but induced LH levels were lower and of shorter duration than those of the periovulatory surge. Three o...
Harrison LA, Squires EL, Nett TM, McKinnon AO.Natural GnRH and its analog have potential for hastening ovulation in mares. A study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of a GnRH agonist given either as an injectable or s.c. implant for induction of ovulation in mares. Forty-five seasonally anestrous mares (March) were assigned to one of three groups (n = 15/group): 1) untreated controls; 2) i.m. injection of the GnRH agonist buserelin at 12-h intervals (40 micrograms/injection for 28 d or until ovulation) and 3) GnRH agonist administered as a s.c. implant (approximately 100 micrograms/24 h for 28 d). Six mares per group were bled on d 0...
Timms M, Botteon A, Manos C, Griffin J, Levina V, Steel R.Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and its synthetic analogues are considered banned substances by the racing industry. GnRH is used as a pharmaceutical to regulate the female oestrous cycle, but the hormone is also thought to increase the production of testosterone in male animals. Using liquid chromatography in conjunction with high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) and data-independent acquisition (DIA), a method is presented for the detection of intact and truncated peptides of GnRH and its analogues down to the low picogram level in equine urine. The study of the catabolism of GnR...
Johnson CA, Thompson DL, Cartmill JA.Three experiments were performed to test the following hypotheses: 1) stallions and/or progesterone-estradiol-treated geldings could serve as models for the effects of a single implant of the GnRH analog, deslorelin acetate, on LH and FSH secretion by mares; and 2) multiple implants of deslorelin acetate could be used as a means of inducing ovarian atrophy in mares for future study of the mechanisms involved in the atrophy observed in some mares after a single implant. In Exp. 1, nine light horse stallions received either a single deslorelin implant (n = 5) or a sham injection (n = 4) on d 0. ...
Brown-Douglas CG, Firth EC, Parkinson TJ, Fennessy PF.Gonadotropin releasing-hormone analogue (buserelin) challenges were carried out every 8 weeks from 4 to 14 months of age on thoroughbred colts born in the spring (n = 6) or autumn (n = 5) to define the onset of puberty. In all colts, luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion followed a seasonal pattern, with high baseline and maximal concentrations in the spring and summer and low concentrations in the winter. Testosterone concentrations were undetectable before spring and, thus, autumn-born colts were younger than spring-born colts when a testosterone response to buserelin was first observed. Mean w...
Blue BJ, Pickett BW, Squires EL, McKinnon AO, Nett TM, Amann RP, Shiner KA.Gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) was administered subcutaneously to reproductively normal stallions, either in a pulsatile manner (10 micrograms GnRH/2 h; n = 6) or as a continuous infusion (10 micrograms GnRH/2 h; n = 6), and in a pulsatile manner to 9 reproductively abnormal stallions, from February to July, 1988. Hormonal secretion patterns, testicular parameters and semen characteristics were monitored before and during treatment. In general, pulsatile GnRH caused a significant increase (P less than 0.05) in luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations in the peripheral blood of normal st...
Lowis TC, Hyland JH.The occurrence of fertile oestrus early in the breeding season is of paramount importance to the Thoroughbred industry to facilitate early conception. This paper compares 2 techniques for inducing fertile oestrus in anoestrous mares using either an extended photoperiod alone or together with gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) infusions. Eleven mares were placed under conditions of 16 h light and 8 h darkness and 5 of these were implanted with osmotic minipumps delivering approximately 100 ng GnRH/kg/h for 28 days (treated mares). The treated mares ovulated 27.7 days earlier than and concei...
Bhardwaj A, Nayan V, Sharma P, Kumar S, Pal Y, Singh J.Equine pituitary gonadotropins (eLH, eFSH, eCG) are heterodimeric glycoprotein hormones with alpha (α) and beta (β) subunits. It is responsible for maintenance of pregnancy in mares during early gestation and fairly valuable for inducing superovulation in animals other than equines. The alpha subunit is common, while beta subunit is species-specific in all glycoprotein hormones. In the present investigation, molecular cloning and in silico characterization including homology modeling and molecular docking analysis of the equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG) alpha subunit was carried out for g...
Alexander SL, Irvine CH.Luteinizing hormone release induced by a range of small (3.3-33 micrograms) and large (300-500 micrograms) i.v. doses of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) was measured in acyclic (n = 4), luteal phase (n = 3) and follicular phase (n = 5) mares and compared with endogenously generated LH pulses in the same reproductive states. Extrapolation from log-linear dose-response curves showed that an LH pulse comparable to an endogenous one would be simulated by i.v. injection of 7.0 (n = 4) and 4.1 (n = 6) micrograms GnRH in luteal and follicular phase mares respectively; a much smaller dose than ...
Turner JE, Irvine CH.Administration to mares of the anabolic steroid, methandriol, at the maximum recommended dose (300 mg every 3 weeks) for 1 1/2 years had no effect on reproductive characteristics except for suppression of GnRH-induced LH release and a tendency to suppress basal LH levels and the height of the ovulatory LH surge. A 4-fold increase in dosage caused marked suppression of basal LH, the LH surge, and GnRH-induced LH release. Other reproductive responses were minimally affected. There were no behavioural effects, and no changes in weight occurred when mares were compared with matched controls. Small...
Porter MB, Cleaver BD, Peltier M, Robinson G, Thatcher WW, Sharp DC.This study compared equine and ovine LH secretory responses to GnRH treatment. Dioestrous mares and ewes were challenged with continuous GnRH for 15 h. Mares that received constant GnRH (110 micrograms h-1) had sustained LH secretion (P < 0.01), whereas LH concentrations in ewes treated with continuous GnRH (25 micrograms h-1) initially increased, then declined and remained low, suggesting GnRH receptor desensitization or downregulation. In addition, progesterone-primed, ovariectomized mares and ewes were challenged with pulsatile or continuous GnRH for 5 days. Plasma LH concentrations were...
Williams GL, Amstalden M, Blodgett GP, Ward JE, Unnerstall DA, Quirk KS.Three experiments were conducted during the operational breeding season to confirm that continuous, subcutaneous infusion of low-dose GnRH would not disrupt established estrous cycles (Experiment 1), and test the hypotheses that a similar treatment would stimulate secretion of LH and induce development of ovulatory follicles in persistently anovulatory mares (Experiments 2 and 3). Treatment with GnRH (5 microg/h) increased (P<0.001) serum P4 during the luteal phase (7.7+/-0.5 versus 6.4+/-0.5 ng/mL), tended to increase serum LH (2.6+/-0.27 versus 1.9+/-0.25 ng/mL), and did not modify intero...
McGrath BM, Scott CJ, Wynn PC, Loy J, Norman ST.Managing the return to regular cyclicity after the winter anestrous period in the mare has been a challenge for the equine breeding industry. Specifically, efforts have been made to shift or shorten the vernal transition period and to have it followed by a predictable first ovulation at the commencement of the breeding season. Intravenous administration of kisspeptin is known to stimulate an LH response in both reproductively active and inactive mares. This study examined the effects of a constant rate infusion (CRI) of kisspeptin on mares during vernal transition. Mares were given a 30 hours...
Heinze H, Klug E.Clinical tests with synthetic gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (Hoechst) were made during the breeding seasons of 1973 and 1974, using 128 mares injected with 1-0 to 4-0 mg of the substance intramuscularly. The mares were placed in one of five groups based on ovarian condition determined by clinical evidence. Some success was obtained in the induction of ovulation in mares with inactive and sub-normally active ovaries and in a small group having cystic ovaries. A large proportion of mares having a mature follicle responded within 48 hr, but others with atretic follicles failed to respond. The u...
Zelli R, Sylla L, Monaci M, Stradaioli G, Sibley LE, Roser JF, Munro C, Liu IK.Granulosa-theca cell tumors (GTCTs) are able to secrete variable amounts of sex steroids and immunoreactive inhibin (ir-INH). Although the pituitary appears to be affected by the presence of a GTCT, pituitary responsiveness to exogenous GnRH has not been examined. The aims of the present study were to: (i) assess the plasma hormone concentrations of ir-INH, gonadotropins and sex steroids in eight mares with GTCT and (ii) assess the responsiveness of pituitary gonadotroph cells to exogenous GnRH stimulus both before and after tumor removal. In seven mares, the contralateral ovary was firm, smal...
Brown-Douglas CG, Firth EC, Parkinson TJ, Fennessy PF.To determine the responsiveness of the pituitary-gonadal axis of peri-pubertal colts to GnRH, buserelin (0.5, 1, 5, 10 and 40 microg) was given to 13 male Thoroughbred yearlings ( n=3-8 colts per dose). Jugular venous blood samples were taken at -10, 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 60, 120 and 180 min relative to buserelin administration. Increases (P < 0.05) in LH concentrations occurred in colts that received 5, 10, or 40 microg buserelin, but not in those that received 0.5 or 1 microg. Peak LH concentrations and mean area under the curve were higher (P < 0.05) in colts receiving 40 microg busereli...
Boyle MS, Skidmore J, Zhang J, Cox JE.The effect of long-term treatment of stallions with a powerful gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogue was investigated. In the first part of the study, 9 sexually mature pony stallions were allocated to 1 of 3 groups, each of which was treated with 240 micrograms or 60 micrograms Buserelin per day administered by subcutaneously sited osmotic pumps or 30-50 micrograms Buserelin per day via solid, slow-release implants injected subcutaneously. Peripheral blood plasma and serum samples were collected frequently and assayed for follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (L...
Nett TM, Shoemaker CF, Squires EL.High concentrations of estrogens in the peripheral circulation during late gestation inhibit synthesis of LH and markedly reduce pituitary content of LH at the end of pregnancy in most domestic species. Because blood concentrations of estrogen peak shortly before mid-gestation in the mare and then gradually decrease until parturition, we hypothesized that pituitary content of LH may increase during late gestation. To test this hypothesis 10 horse mares were challenged with a maximally stimulatory dose (2 micrograms/kg) of GnRH on d 240 and 320 of gestation and d 3 after parturition. A separate...
Gånheim A, Gånheim A, Jöchle W.In a blinded trial, the effectiveness and safety of 2.2 mg of the GnRH analog deslorelin acetate, administered in a short-term implant (STI) to normally cycling mares in estrus with a dominant ovarian follicle of 30 mm in diameter or larger, were evaluated, using a placebo implant as a negative control. A total of 39 mares received treatments at admittance with pre-randomized implants containing either 2.2 mg or 0 mg deslorelin. Mares were teased daily and examined rectally with ultrasound at 24 h intervals to determine time to ovulation and duration of estrus. The number of breedings and the ...
Greaves HE, Porter MB, Sharp DC.Long-term ovariectomized Pony mares were treated with oestradiol (0.2-5.0 mg; i.m.) at 12 h intervals for 10 days. Blood samples were collected by jugular venepuncture three times a day throughout the experiment and additional blood samples were collected at 15 min intervals for 12 h on days 0 and 10 (sampling periods 1 and 2, respectively). There were significant effects of oestradiol treatment (P < 0.05) and oestradiol treatment x day (P < 0.0001) on the mean LH concentrations each day. Regression analysis of LH time trends each day indicates that there is heterogeneity (P < 0.001) ...
Brinsko SP.Poor fertility has been associated with hormonal imbalances in the stallion. The primary cause of this imbalance is unknown, but it may be related to abnormal gonadotropin secretion. Secretion of GnRH from the hypothalamus causes the release of LH and FSH from the anterior pituitary and these gonadotropins help maintain adequate steroid levels so that normal spermatogenesis can occur. Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism has not been documented in the stallion; however, GnRH therapy has improved the fertility of a limited number of horses. Downregulation of the HPT axis readily occurs in most other s...
Jöchle W.Ovuplant (deslorelin STI), when used in estrous mares with a follicle > or = 30 mm, reliably causes acceleration of ovulation and assurance that > 80% of the treated mares will ovulate within 48 hours. Time to ovulation is reduced by 30 hours or more. Treatment with Ovuplant had no adverse effects on pregnancy rates and did not increase the rate of early twin pregnancies. Treatment did not cause local or systemic side effects beyond short-term local irritation. Mares can be treated repeatedly without the development of tolerance or the loss of effectiveness. These studies have shown that...