Martin G B, White C L
School of Agriculture (Animal Science), University of Western Australia, Nedlands.
J Reprod Fertil. 1992 Nov;96(2):497-507. doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0960497.
The hypothesis that the secretion of gonadotrophins would be reduced by zinc deficiency was tested in five groups of four young Merino rams (initial liveweight 22 kg). Four groups were fed ad libitum with diets containing 4, 10, 17 or 27 micrograms Zn g-1. The effects of loss of appetite on the deficient diet was controlled by feeding a fifth group (pair-fed control) at a rate of 27 micrograms Zn g-1, but the amount of feed offered was restricted to that eaten voluntarily by the deficient (4 micrograms Zn g-1) group. Blood was sampled every 20 min for 32 h on two occasions before the treatments were imposed and 96 days later, at the end of the experiment. The rams were injected with gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH; 10 ng kg-1 i.v.) after each serial sampling, and with naloxone (1 mg kg-1 i.v.) 24 h after the end of the final GnRH test. In the group that were fed the diet with the lowest zinc content, the concentration of zinc in blood plasma was reduced to 18% of that in the pair-fed controls (P < 0.05) and was within the deficient range. The appetite of the deficient rams was half that of the controls fed 27 micrograms Zn g-1 ad libitum and there was no increase in liveweight or testicular diameter during pubertal development. Similar, but smaller, effects were observed in the pair-fed controls. There were no significant differences between pair-fed and deficient groups in the frequency of the luteinizing hormone (LH) pulses or in the concentration of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), but the secretion of gonadotrophins was markedly lower in both groups than in the control rams fed ad libitum. The response to GnRH was not affected by treatment, but the increase in LH pulse frequency evoked by naloxone was lower in the deficient animals than in other groups. The animals fed zinc at intermediate rates (10-17 micrograms g-1) showed similar responses to the controls fed ad libitum. It is concluded that the specific effects of zinc deficiency on testicular function were small. Most of the reduction in testicular growth in rams fed a deficient diet was not specifically related to the trace element, but was due to the fall in energy and protein intake caused by the loss of appetite. This leads to a reduction in the frequency of GnRH pulses secreted by the hypothalamus, and to low rates of gonadotrophin secretion by the pituitary gland.
锌缺乏会降低促性腺激素分泌这一假设,在五组每组四只的年轻美利奴公羊(初始体重22千克)中进行了测试。四组公羊随意采食含锌量分别为4、10、17或27微克/克的日粮。通过以27微克/克的锌含量给第五组(配对饲喂对照组)喂食来控制食欲减退对低锌日粮的影响,但提供的饲料量限制在低锌(4微克/克)组公羊自愿采食的量。在施加处理前和实验结束96天后,分两次每隔20分钟采集32小时的血液样本。每次连续采血后给公羊静脉注射促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH;10纳克/千克),在最后一次GnRH试验结束24小时后静脉注射纳洛酮(1毫克/千克)。在采食锌含量最低日粮的组中,血浆锌浓度降至配对饲喂对照组的18%(P<0.05),处于缺乏范围。低锌组公羊的采食量是随意采食27微克/克锌的对照组的一半,在青春期发育期间体重和睾丸直径均未增加。配对饲喂对照组也观察到类似但较小的影响。配对饲喂组和低锌组在促黄体生成素(LH)脉冲频率或促卵泡激素(FSH)浓度上没有显著差异,但两组促性腺激素的分泌均明显低于随意采食的对照公羊。对GnRH的反应不受处理影响,但低锌组动物中纳洛酮引起的LH脉冲频率增加低于其他组。采食中等锌含量(10 - 17微克/克)日粮的动物与随意采食的对照组表现出相似的反应。得出的结论是,锌缺乏对睾丸功能的特定影响较小。采食低锌日粮的公羊睾丸生长的大部分减少并非与微量元素有特定关系,而是由于食欲减退导致能量和蛋白质摄入量下降。这导致下丘脑分泌GnRH脉冲频率降低,以及垂体促性腺激素分泌率降低。