Ying S Y
Laboratories for Neuroendocrinology, Salk Institute, La Jolla, California 92037.
Endocr Rev. 1988 May;9(2):267-93. doi: 10.1210/edrv-9-2-267.
The endocrine system displays highly complex interactions among its components. Excesses or deficiencies of hormone production in one gland may alter the production of hormones by others. Several physiological functions are affected by a balance among hormones acting either together or in sequence. For example, FSH secretion has been demonstrated to be affected by hypothalamic influences upon the anterior pituitary through a specific releasing factor, the decapeptide LRF. This decapeptide stimulates the release of both LH and FSH by the pituitary, and these gonadotropins cause the production of steroids by the testes and the ovaries. Gonadal steroids in the blood act directly upon the anterior pituitary to regulate the output of gonadotropins as originally proposed by Moore and Price in 1932 (3), or act indirectly upon the hypothalamus to adjust the output of pituitary hormones in accordance with the needs of the reproductive system. However, such a simple negative feedback of steroids on the hypothalamic-hypophysial axis cannot account for the differential secretion of FSH observed during the estrus cycle. Therefore, the concept that a gonadal protein, inhibin, specifically regulates FSH secretion was proposed. This concept has now been validated by the isolation and characterization of two forms of inhibin that exert their effects on the pituitary to suppress FSH secretion both in vitro and probably in vivo. Furthermore, the production of inhibin is stimulated by FSH, thus establishing a reciprocal relationship between the release of FSH and inhibin. Since hormones in the body are controlled through interlocking complexes of factors, a variety of secondary factors, in one way or another, may also exert influence on the regulation of FSH secretion. As an example, TGF beta, a protein growth factor found in all tissues, promotes the basal secretion of FSH by the pituitary and enhances FSH-mediated estrogen production by the granulosa cells. It is therefore not surprising that two forms of a novel protein, activin and activin A, isolated from the same FF from which inhibins were isolated, show bioactivities similar to those of TGF beta. These activins are formed as dimers of the two beta-subunits of inhibin, probably as a result of the rearrangement of the gene products. This novel observation that different arrangements of gene products can result in opposite biological activities may thus reflect a wholly different level of control of FSH secretion. If such a phenomenon occurs in other biosystems, it would represent an important form of homeostatic mechanism for controlling biologically active substances.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
内分泌系统各组成部分之间表现出高度复杂的相互作用。一个腺体激素分泌过多或过少可能会改变其他腺体激素的分泌。几种生理功能受到协同作用或按顺序作用的激素之间平衡的影响。例如,已证明促卵泡激素(FSH)的分泌受下丘脑通过一种特定释放因子——十肽促性腺激素释放因子(LRF)对垂体前叶的影响。这种十肽刺激垂体释放促黄体生成素(LH)和FSH,而这些促性腺激素促使睾丸和卵巢产生类固醇。血液中的性腺类固醇直接作用于垂体前叶以调节促性腺激素的分泌,这是1932年摩尔和普赖斯最初提出的观点(3),或者间接作用于下丘脑以根据生殖系统的需求调节垂体激素的分泌。然而,类固醇对下丘脑 - 垂体轴的这种简单负反馈无法解释发情周期中观察到的促卵泡激素的差异分泌。因此,提出了一种性腺蛋白——抑制素特异性调节促卵泡激素分泌的概念。现在这一概念已通过两种抑制素形式的分离和特性鉴定得到验证,这两种抑制素在体外以及可能在体内对垂体发挥作用以抑制促卵泡激素的分泌。此外,促卵泡激素刺激抑制素的产生,从而在促卵泡激素和抑制素的释放之间建立了一种相互关系。由于体内激素是通过相互关联的因子复合物来控制的,各种次要因素也可能以某种方式对促卵泡激素分泌的调节产生影响。例如,转化生长因子β(TGFβ)是一种在所有组织中都能找到的蛋白质生长因子,它促进垂体促卵泡激素的基础分泌,并增强颗粒细胞中促卵泡激素介导的雌激素生成。因此,从与抑制素相同的卵泡液中分离出的两种新型蛋白质——激活素和激活素A,具有与TGFβ相似的生物活性,这并不奇怪。这些激活素是由抑制素的两个β亚基形成的二聚体,可能是基因产物重排的结果。基因产物的不同排列可导致相反生物活性这一新颖发现,可能反映了促卵泡激素分泌控制的一个截然不同的层面。如果这种现象发生在其他生物系统中,它将代表一种控制生物活性物质的重要稳态机制形式。(摘要截选至400字)