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Gonadotropin-releasing Hormone (GnRH)

Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) plays a key role in the regulation of the reproductive system. GnRH has a similar structure in all animals. It is a decapeptide, meaning that it consists of a chain of 10 amino acids.
GnRH acts primarily to stimulate the anterior pituitary gland to synthesise and secrete the gonadotropins FSH and LH. It exerts three principal actions on the anterior pituitary gland:
  • Synthesis and storage of gonadotropins
  • Activation: the movement of gonadotropins from the reserve pool to a pool ready for direct action
  • Immediate release (direct secretion) of gonadotropins     

Actions of GnRH on the anterior pituitary gland
 

Because GnRH plays such a vital role in the secretion of gonadotropins, several substances have been developed that mimic or inhibit its action:
  • A GnRH agonsit: a drug that has an affinity for and stimulates physiologic activity at cell receptors normally stimulated by naturally occurring GnRH.
  • A GnRH analogue: a chemical compound with a structure similar to that of GnRH, but differing from it in respect to a certain component. It may have a similar or opposite action metabolically.
  • A GnRH antagonist: a substance that tends to nullify or cancel out the action of GnRH, such as a drug that binds to a cell receptor without eliciting a biological response.     
The role of GnRH and related substances in assisted reproductive technologies is discussed in more detail in    Third Step: ART.

The specific rate and amplitude of GnRH secretion is the key to the control of the female reproductive cycle that leads to the maturation of an egg each month. In the male, FSH and LH released from the anterior pituitary gland in response to GnRH stimulation play a major role in spermatogenesis.


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Last updated: 14/05/2008
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