Kauffman A S
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, and the Center for Research in Reproduction, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA.
J Neuroendocrinol. 2004 Sep;16(9):794-806. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2826.2004.01229.x.
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is the central neuroendocrine regulator of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. Multiple structural variants of GnRH are present in vertebrates. The first isoform isolated in the mammalian brain (GnRH I) was shown to regulate the release of pituitary gonadotropins. Recently, a second form has been discovered in mammals (GnRH II), both in the brain and periphery. Although it is unlikely to be a primary regulator of gonadotropin release, the highly conserved GnRH II variant appears to have a wide array of physiological functions. In the periphery, GnRH I and II have similar roles in regulating cell proliferation and mediating hormonal secretion from the ovary and placenta in an autocrine/paracrine manner. In the brain, GnRH I and II apparently modulate mammalian reproductive behaviours in different but complementary ways: GnRH I stimulates luteinizing hormone/follicle-stimulating hormone secretion (and thus gonadal steroids) and promotes sexual behaviour in ad libitum fed animals. By contrast, GnRH II acts as a permissive regulator of female reproductive behaviour based on energy status, as well as a modifier of short-term food intake. GnRH II has also been implicated in the regulation of calcium and potassium channels in nervous systems of amphibians, functions which may also be present in mammals. Increasing evidence suggests that the effects of GnRH II in both the periphery and brain may be mediated by GnRH receptor subtypes distinct from the type-1 GnRH receptor. It is likely that this evolutionarily conserved peptide has been co-opted over evolutionary time to possess multiple regulatory functions in a broad range of biological aspects, including, but not limited to, reproduction. Here, the proposed actions of both neural and peripheral GnRH II in affecting physiology and behaviour are summarized, and an outline of critical directions for future research is proposed.
促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)是下丘脑-垂体-性腺轴的核心神经内分泌调节因子。脊椎动物体内存在多种GnRH结构变体。在哺乳动物大脑中分离出的第一种异构体(GnRH I)被证明可调节垂体促性腺激素的释放。最近,在哺乳动物中发现了第二种形式(GnRH II),存在于大脑和外周组织中。尽管GnRH II不太可能是促性腺激素释放的主要调节因子,但高度保守的GnRH II变体似乎具有广泛的生理功能。在外周组织中,GnRH I和II在以自分泌/旁分泌方式调节细胞增殖以及介导卵巢和胎盘的激素分泌方面具有相似作用。在大脑中,GnRH I和II显然以不同但互补的方式调节哺乳动物的生殖行为:GnRH I刺激黄体生成素/促卵泡激素分泌(从而促进性腺类固醇分泌),并促进自由采食动物的性行为。相比之下,GnRH II根据能量状态作为雌性生殖行为的允许调节因子,以及短期食物摄入量的调节因子。GnRH II还与两栖动物神经系统中钙通道和钾通道的调节有关,这些功能在哺乳动物中可能也存在。越来越多的证据表明,GnRH II在外周组织和大脑中的作用可能由不同于1型GnRH受体的GnRH受体亚型介导。这种在进化上保守的肽很可能在进化过程中被用于在广泛的生物学方面,包括但不限于生殖,发挥多种调节功能。在此,总结了神经和外周GnRH II在影响生理和行为方面的拟议作用,并提出了未来研究的关键方向概述。