Coexistence of Gonadotrophin-Releasing Hormone and Galanin: Immunohisto-chemical and Functional Studies.
Coen. C W CW; Montagnese. C C; Opacka-Juffry. J J
Key Findings
- Galanin is present in many GnRH‑producing neurons in the rat preoptic area.
- Galanin alone caused a small rise in LH release, but only in cells taken on the day of pro‑oestrus.
- Galanin did not enhance or prime the LH response when combined with GnRH.
- Delta sleep‑inducing peptide also produced a modest LH release under the same conditions.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study offers little actionable insight. Galanin does not appear to be a strong or reliable way to boost LH or influence reproductive hormones in humans, and no dosing guidance emerges. The findings are mainly of basic science interest rather than a protocol to apply.
Summary
Researchers found that some brain cells in rats contain both the hormone GnRH and the peptide galanin. When they tested galanin on pituitary cells, it only caused a tiny increase in the hormone LH, and only at a specific point in the rat's reproductive cycle. Galanin didn’t boost the effect of GnRH, and another peptide (delta sleep‑inducing peptide) showed a similar weak effect.
Abstract
Our observation of galanin-immunoreactive perikarya with morphological characteristics strikingly similar to those containing gorvadotrophin-releasmg hormone (GnRH) led us to undertake double-label immunohistochemical studies on the distribution of these peptides. A considerable proportion of GnRH-containing perikarya in the rat preoptic area were found to be immunoreactive for galanin. In order to establish whether this coexistence contributes to the control of luteinizing hormone (LH) release, the two peptides have been perfused alone and in combination through anterior pituitary cell columns derived from female rats in various endocrine conditions. Galanin at 0.1 mu M had a small stimulatory effect on LH release from cells obtained on the day of pro-oestrus; this effect was less than that obtained with GnRH at 4 nM. Cells from oestrous rats showed no LH release in response to galanin. The studies undertaken thusfar have not indicated that galanin has a priming effect on the release of LH induced by subsequent treatment with galanin or a potentiating effect when administered together with GnRH. Delta sleep-inducing peptide, another neuropeptide recently reported to be coexistent with GnRH, was also found to be capable of inducing a small discharge of LH from anterior pituitary cells obtained on the day of pro-oestrus. Further studies will be required to establish the full consequences of the coexistence of these peptides and GnRH.
Study Information
pubmed
1990
1990-04-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1365-2826.1990.tb00839.x
62
22