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Gonadorelin

GnRH, Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone, LHRH, Factrel

Quick Stats
Studies 192
Trials 100
2025 pubmed

Reproductive gene expression in female broodstock European flat oyster, Ostrea edulis, under ambient and constant temperature and photoperiod regimes.

Cowan. Mairi E ME; Jimenez-Fernandez. Eduardo E; Malla. Aaliyah A; Hughes. Adam D AD

Key Findings

  • APGWamide and vitellogenin levels increase as female oysters mature under all tested conditions.
  • Constant 24‑hour light leads to less uniform egg development compared to natural light cycles.
  • GnRH (gonadotropin‑releasing hormone) expression showed no clear pattern in the oyster study.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research offers no actionable guidance on using gonadorelin or related peptides for human longevity, metabolism, or performance. The results are specific to oyster biology and don’t translate into protocols or dosage recommendations for people.

Summary

This study looked at how temperature and light affect the reproductive genes of the European flat oyster. It found that a peptide called APGWamide and a protein called vitellogenin rise as female oysters develop, while the role of GnRH (the same family of hormone used in humans) was unclear. Light and temperature both influence oyster reproduction, but the findings don’t give any direct tips for human health or performance.

Abstract

The European flat oyster (Ostrea edulis) is a species of significant ecological, commercial and cultural importance. Interest in scaling up its production is growing rapidly, however, challenges in managing reproduction in culture remain. This study aimed to improve understanding of reproductive control in female broodstock by analysing the gene expression of the key endocrine factors APGWamide, GnRH (gonadotropin releasing hormone) and GPB5 in the visceral ganglion, as well as vitellogenin in the gonads. This was performed alongside histological classification of individuals by sex and reproductive stage. Oysters were subjected to three different conditioning regimes: a reference regime consisting of ambient temperature and a long-day photoperiod of 18-h light: 6-h dark (REF(Amb/18:6)), and separately, two constant temperature regimes of 14 °C, either under simulated natural photoperiod (14C/NP) or constant 24-h light (14C/LL). Histology revealed a female-to-male shift across regimes. Gametogenesis progressed under all conditions, but females under constant light (14C/LL) showed less uniform development. Apgwamide expression significantly increased as females developed across all regimes. Vitellogenin expression also significantly increased over time and with gametogenesis under the REF(Amb/18:6) and 14C/NP regimes. No clear patterns were observed for gnrh and gpb5 expression in this dataset, though their roles in reproduction cannot be excluded. Altogether, these findings support APGWamide and vitellogenin as key factors of interest in female reproduction, with light, as well as the known effects of temperature, influencing development. This research provides insights to support broodstock conditioning and European flat oyster production and restoration efforts.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-09-25T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.cbpa.2025.111934

References

43