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This digital document is a journal article from Hormones and
Behavior, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered
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Description:
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is largely responsible for
the initiation of sexual behaviors; one form of GnRH activates a
physiological cascade causing gonadal growth and gonadal steroid
feedback to the brain, and another form is thought to act as a
neurotransmitter to enhance sexual receptivity. In contrast to
GnRH, gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (GnIH) inhibits gonadotropin
release. The distribution of GnIH in the avian brain suggests that
it has not only hypophysiotropic actions but also unknown
behavioral actions. GnIH fibers are present in the median eminence
(ME) and are in apparent contact with chicken GnRH (cGnRH)-I and
-II neurons and fibers. In birds, cGnRH-I regulates pituitary
gonadotropin release, whereas cGnRH-II enhances copulation
solicitation in estradiol-primed females exposed to male song. In
the present study, we determined the effects of GnIH administered
centrally to female white-crowned sparrows. A physiological dose of
GnIH reduced circulating LH and inhibited copulation solicitation,
without affecting locomotor activity. Using rhodaminated GnIH,
putative GnIH binding sites were seen in the ME close to GnRH-I
fiber terminals and in the midbrain on or close to GnRH-II neurons.
These data demonstrate direct effects of GnIH upon reproductive
physiology and behavior, possibly via separate actions on two forms
of GnRH.