Sex-steroid actions on human GH secretion — ASN Events

Sex-steroid actions on human GH secretion (#61)

Johannes Veldhuis 1
  1. Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States

Endocrine glands communicate with remote target cells via a mixture of continuous and intermittent signal exchange. Continuous signaling allows slowly varying control, whereas intermittency permits large rapid adjustments. The control systems that mediate such homeostatic corrections operate in a species-, gender-, age-, and context-selective fashion. Significant progress has been made in understanding mechanisms of adaptive interglandular signaling in vivo. Principal goals are to understand the physiological origins, significance, and mechanisms of pulsatile hormone secretion. Key analytical issues are: 1) to quantify the number, size, shape, and uniformity of pulses, nonpulsatile (basal) secretion, and elimination kinetics; 2) to evaluate regulation of the axis as a whole; and 3) to reconstruct dose-response interactions without disrupting hormone connections. This talk will focus on the motivations driving and the methodologies used for such analyses.

  1. Veldhuis JD, Carlson ML, Johnson ML 1987 The pituitary gland secretes in bursts: appraising the nature of glandular secretory impulses by simultaneous multiple-parameter deconvolution of plasma hormone concentrations. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 84:7686-7690.
  2. Pincus SM, Mulligan T, Iranmanesh A, Gheorghiu S, Godschalk M, Veldhuis JD 1996 Older males secrete luteinizing hormone and testosterone more irregularly, and jointly more asynchronously, than younger males. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 93:14100-14105.
  3. Keenan DM, Licinio J, Veldhuis JD 2001 A feedback-controlled ensemble model of the stress-responsive hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 98(7):4028-4033.
  4. Keenan DM, Alexander SL, Irvine CHG, Clarke IJ, Canny BJ, Scott CJ, Tilbrook AJ, Turner AI, Veldhuis JD 2004 Reconstruction of in vivo time-evolving neuroendocrine dose-response properties unveils admixed deterministic and stochastic elements. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101(17):6740-6745.
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