Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Blocking hormone can fix stress-induced infertility

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Jan, 2015 10:59 AM
    Chronic stress activates a hormone that reduces fertility long after the stress has ended, but blocking this hormone returns female reproductive behaviour to normal, a research on rats has suggested.
     
    Blocking the gene for the hormone -- called gonadotropin inhibitory hormone (GnIH) -- could help women overcome the negative reproductive consequences of stress, the findings suggested.
     
    "What is absolutely amazing is that one single gene controls this complex reproductive system, and that you can elegantly knock this gene down and change the reproductive outcome completely," said Daniela Kaufer, an associate professor of integrative biology at the University of California in Berkeley, US.
     
    "We know that human GnIH is present in the human brain and gonads, and that it inhibits the production of steroids in human ovaries, so certainly the potential is there for it to be manipulated to address human infertility," George Bentley from the University of Caifornia pointed out.
     
    "GnIH seems to be the main player, because it is elevated in the brain's hypothalamus for a full estrus cycle after the stress ends," Kaufer noted. "When we knocked down levels of GnIH, we restored all reproductive behaviour back to normal." 
     
    The findings appeared in the journal eLife.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Alcohol increases risk of HPV infection in men

    Alcohol increases risk of HPV infection in men
    Men, who consumed on an average over 9.9 grams of alcohol per day, had a significantly higher risk of HPV infection, the findings showed....

    Alcohol increases risk of HPV infection in men

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids
    The exact cause of juvenile diabetes had eluded scientists for long and researchers have now found that a mother's exposure to viruses...

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids

    Family meals protect kids from obesity

    Family meals protect kids from obesity
    Even having as few as one or two family meals a week during adolescence may protect your kids from being obese when they turn into adults, says a study....

    Family meals protect kids from obesity

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk
    Independent of other known risk factors, measuring the sense of family or peer invalidation - or lack of acceptance - that teenagers harbour can...

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder
    Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder appear to be linked with dendritic spine loss in the brain, suggesting the two disorders may share common pathophysiological elements....

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified
    In a finding that may lead to improved treatments for hypertension and heart failure, scientists have uncovered a new pathway through which the brain...

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified