Horm Metab Res 1988; 20(8): 484-489
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1010864
ORIGINALS

© Georg Thieme Verlag, Stuttgart · New York

Thyroid Hormone Response to Thyrotropin Releasing Hormone After Cold Treatment During Pre- and Postnatal Development in the Domestic Fowl

E. Decuypere1 , A. Iqbal2 , H. Michels1 , E. R. Kühn2 , R. Schneider3 , A. Abd El Azeem1
  • 1Laboratory for Physiology of Domestic Animals, K.U. Leuven, Heverlee, Belgium
  • 2Laboratory for Comparative Endocrinology, K.U. Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
  • 3Department of Animal Ethology, Humbold Universität, Berlin, German Democratic Republic
Further Information

Publication History

1986

1987

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Summary

The purpose of the present study was to compare the effect of periodic cooling during the establishment of a functional pituitary-thyroid axis at days 11-14 of incubation and at other developmental stages, on the subsequent thyroid hormone response to thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH).

In the first and second experiment chick embryos were cooled for 6 hr/day to 30°C from day 11 till 14 and from day 15 till 18 respectively, whereas control groups were incubated throughout at 37.8°C. In both experiments the thyroxine (T4) response upon TRH in 19 day-old embryos was higher in the previously cold treated embryos, according to the percentages of increase. However, the higher T4 response in the cold treated animals disappeared in 1 or 7 day-old chicks hatched from the 2nd experiment, but remained present in chicks of the same ages in the 1st experiment.

In a third experiment the T4 response to TRH injection immediately and 3 and 8 days after a temperature treatment (25°C or 12°C) for one week on four weeks old broiler chickens was found to be similar in both temperature groups.

In all experiments there was a concomitant triiodothyronine (T3) increase after TRH injection, but differences between experimental groups were observed at days 15 and 19 of incubation and immediately after the postnatal temperature treatment.

As an overall conclusion the results indicate that cold treatment only during the establishment of the hypothalamo-hypophysial control of thyroid function can have a long lasting effect by enhancing the T4 response to TRH injection.