Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone (LHRH) Agonist Restoration of Age-Associated Decline of Thymus Weight, Thymic LHRH Receptors, and Thymocyte Proliferative Capacity

1989 
Abstract The presence of specific LHRH-binding sites within the rat thymus gland and the ability of LHRH and its agonistic and antagonistic analogs to directly modulate thymus function prompted us to study the possible changes in the number of thymic LHRH-binding sites during aging-induced physiological immunosenescence. Moreover, the effects of chronic treatment of aging rats with a potent LHRH agonist (LHRH-A) on thymic LHRH receptors, thymus weight and histology, as well as thymocyte proliferative capacity were assessed. For comparison, the effects of castration on the same parameters was also investigated. The process of aging is accompanied by a sharp reduction in LHRH-A-binding sites within the thymus gland of both female and male rats. Starting at 7 months of age, a 50% decrease in thymic LHRH-A binding was followed, at 11–13 months of age, by a nearly 65% inhibition of receptor numbers. In 16- to 19-month-old rats, LHRH-A binding was almost completely lost. Thymus weight was 30% reduced in 7-month...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    26
    References
    126
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []