HPG 2 Flashcards
Define puberty
The transition from the non-reproductive to the reproductive state
What happens (briefly) in puberty?
1) Gonads produce mature gametes - testes make spermatozoa and ovaries develop oocytes
2) Breast development in females, increased testicular volume in males
3) Secondary characteristics develop
4) Physiological changes such as hair patterning, height, and actual body shape, along with some psychological changes
What are the two endocrine events that occur during puberty?
1) Adrenarche
2) Gonadarche
What is adrenarche?
The change in adrenal androgen secretion due to cellular remodelling of the adrenal glands.
DHEA and DHEAS levels change, with a gradual increase in their serum levels starting from the age of 6-15, to a 20-fold increase peaking at 20-25 years of age. It declines thereafter. It is secreted from the zona reticularis of the adrenal cortex.
What is gonadarche?
- LH leads to steroid synthesis and the development of secondary characteristics
- FSH stimulates the growth of testes in males and steroid synthesis and follicular genesis in females
What does adrenarche cause?
Pubarche - which is the appearance of pubic/axillary hair resulting from adrenal androgen secretion
Increased sebum production (acne)
What else (apart from increased sebum) can cause acne?
Infection
Abnormal keratinisation
Describe gonadarche
Occurs several years after adrenarche (11 y/o)
Reactivation of the HPG (after foetal development)
Activation of gonadal steroid production, leading to the production of viable gametes and ability to reproduce
Describe GnRH
- synthesised and secreted by specialist hypothalamic centres (the GnRH neurons)
- HPG axis is activated in the 16th gestational week, and the pulsatile GnRH secretion in the foetus occurs until 1-2 years postnatally, and then they are ‘restrained’ for about 10 years or more
- at puberty there is a gradual rise in the pulsatile release of GnRH
What changes in the pattern of LH secretion occur during puberty?
Early to mid-puberty: nocturnal rise of LH secretion, after which the rise is normalised throughout the 24 hour period
What stimulates the onset of puberty?
We do not have a definitive answer
- Clear that it is a maturational event within the CNS
- Environmental factors play a role
- The epigenome also has a role to play
- Body fat/nutrition: studies have shown a link between the onset and regulation of puberty and body fat and nutrition
- Kisspeptin is the gatekeeper of puberty
How are nutrition and body fat linked to puberty?
There is a known link between fat metabolism and reproduction (PCOS causes metabolic dysfunction)
Also, in people with anorexia/athletes, it is found that they have:
- a reduced response to GnRH
- decreased gonadotrophin levels
- amenorrhea
which is restored when they are nourished/stop training
What can inactivating mutations of KISS1R lead to?
- hypogonadism
- failure to enter puberty
- hypogonadotropic hypogonadism
What can activating mutations of KISS1R lead to?
- precocious puberty
What is consonance?
The smooth, ordered progression of changes through puberty
The age of onset/pace/duration of changes will vary between individuals, but the order they occur in will remain the same