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Dive into the research topics where Catherine Viguié is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine Viguié.


Endocrinology | 1997

Endotoxin Inhibits the Reproductive Neuroendocrine Axis While Stimulating Adrenal Steroids: A Simultaneous View from Hypophyseal Portal and Peripheral Blood

Deborah F. Battaglia; Jennifer M. Bowen; Holly B. Krasa; Lori A. Thrun; Catherine Viguié; Fred J. Karsch

This study was designed to test the hypothesis that systemic immune challenge with endotoxin inhibits the reproductive axis centrally by suppressing GnRH pulsatile release into hypophyseal portal blood. Using alert, normally behaving, ovariectomized ewes, we sampled hypophyseal portal blood at 10-min intervals beginning 4 h before and continuing 10 h after endotoxin (400 ng/kg, iv bolus, n = 6) or saline (vehicle, iv, n = 6). Simultaneous jugular samples for measurement of LH, cortisol, and progesterone were taken, and core body temperature was monitored by telemetry. Saline had no effect on any of the parameters in control ewes. In contrast, endotoxin dramatically inhibited the reproductive neuroendocrine axis coincident with stimulating the adrenal steroids, cortisol and progesterone, and elevating body temperature. Mean GnRH collection rate and GnRH pulse amplitude were suppressed (pre- vs. 7 h postendotoxin: collection rate 0.93 ± 0.31 vs. 0.34 ± 0.13 pg/min; amplitude 4.13 ± 1.33 vs. 1.30 ± 0.41 pg/m...


Biology of Reproduction | 2000

Endocrine Alterations That Underlie Endotoxin-Induced Disruption of the Follicular Phase in Ewes

Deborah F. Battaglia; Holly B. Krasa; Vasantha Padmanabhan; Catherine Viguié; Fred J. Karsch

Abstract Two experiments were conducted to investigate endocrine mechanisms by which the immune/inflammatory stimulus endotoxin disrupts the follicular phase of the estrous cycle of the ewe. In both studies, endotoxin was infused i.v. (300 ng/kg per hour) for 26 h beginning 12 h after withdrawal of progesterone to initiate the follicular phase. Experiment 1 sought to pinpoint which endocrine step or steps in the preovulatory sequence are compromised by endotoxin. In sham-infused controls, estradiol rose progressively from the time of progesterone withdrawal until the LH/FSH surges and estrous behavior, which began ∼48 h after progesterone withdrawal. Endotoxin interrupted the preovulatory estradiol rise and delayed or blocked the LH/FSH surges and estrus. Experiment 2 tested the hypothesis that endotoxin suppresses the high-frequency LH pulses necessary to stimulate the preovulatory estradiol rise. All 6 controls exhibited high-frequency LH pulses typically associated with the preovulatory estradiol rise. As in the first experiment, endotoxin interrupted the estradiol rise and delayed or blocked the LH/FSH surges and estrus. LH pulse patterns, however, differed among the six endotoxin-treated ewes. Three showed markedly disrupted LH pulses compared to those of controls. The three remaining experimental ewes expressed LH pulses similar to those of controls; yet the estradiol rise and preovulatory LH surge were still disrupted. Our results demonstrate that endotoxin invariably interrupts the preovulatory estradiol rise and delays or blocks the subsequent LH and FSH surges in the ewe. Mechanistically, endotoxin can interfere with the preovulatory sequence of endocrine events via suppression of LH pulsatility, although other processes such as ovarian responsiveness to gonadotropin stimulation appear to be disrupted as well.


Brain Research Bulletin | 1997

Control of the circannual rhythm of reproduction by melatonin in the ewe

B. Malpaux; Catherine Viguié; Donal C. Skinner; Jean-Claude Thiéry; Philippe Chemineau

Annual variations in day length are responsible for seasonal changes in reproductive activity in sheep. However, in constant photoperiodic conditions, ewes express an endogenous rhythm characterized by alternations of reproductive activity and quiescence that are not synchronized among animals. Thus, the main role of photoperiod in the natural environment appears to be the synchronization of this endogenous rhythm. Photoperiodic information is processed through a complex nervous and endocrine pathway to modulate reproductive activity. Light information perceived at the level of the retina is transformed through neural processing into an endocrine signal by the pineal gland: the nocturnal increase in melatonin release. Recent studies strongly suggest that melatonin has a hypothalamic target to modulate the reproductive neuroendocrine axis. Most LHRH perikarya are located in the preoptic area, but this region is devoid of melatonin receptors, and microimplants of melatonin placed in the preoptic area do not effect LHRH release. Thus, melatonin influences LHRH neurones indirectly and must involve interneurons. Good evidence now exists to demonstrate that a population of dopaminergic neurons with axons projecting to the median eminence is one of these interneurons.


Endocrinology | 2001

Endotoxin inhibits pituitary responsiveness to gonadotropin-releasing hormone.

Candace Y. Williams; Thomas G. Harris; Deborah F. Battaglia; Catherine Viguié; Fred J. Karsch

Immune/inflammatory challenges powerfully suppress reproductive neuroendocrine activity. This inhibition is generally considered to be centrally mediated via mechanisms that regulate GnRH secretion. The present study provides two lines of evidence that bacterial endotoxin, a commonly used model of immune/inflammatory challenge, also acts to inhibit pituitary responsiveness to GnRH. In the first experiment, pulsatile secretion of GnRH into pituitary portal blood and LH into peripheral blood were monitored in ovariectomized ewes treated with a low dose of endotoxin. Although this treatment only marginally suppressed GnRH pulsatile secretion, it markedly disrupted LH pulsatility. In extreme cases, the low dose of endotoxin blocked LH pulses without inhibiting endogenous GnRH pulses, thereby uncoupling GnRH and LH pulsatile suppression. In the second experiment, we tested the hypothesis that endotoxin inhibits pituitary responsiveness to exogenous GnRH pulses. Hourly pulses of GnRH were delivered to ovariecto...


Endocrinology | 1999

ENDOTOXIN DISRUPTS THE ESTRADIOL-INDUCED LUTEINIZING HORMONE SURGE : INTERFERENCE WITH ESTRADIOL SIGNAL READING, NOT SURGE RELEASE

Deborah F. Battaglia; Andrew B. Beaver; Thomas G. Harris; Edmund Tanhehco; Catherine Viguié; Fred J. Karsch

Three experiments were conducted to investigate whether the immune/inflammatory stimulus endotoxin disrupts the estradiol-induced LH surge of the ewe. Ovariectomized sheep were set up in an artificial follicular phase model in which luteolysis is simulated by progesterone withdrawal and the follicular phase estradiol rise is reproduced experimentally. In the first experiment, we tested the hypothesis that endotoxin interferes with the estradiol-induced LH surge. Ewes were either infused with endotoxin (300 ng/kg/h, i.v.) for 30 h beginning at onset of a 48-h estradiol stimulus or sham infused as a control. Endotoxin significantly delayed the time to the LH surge (P < 0.01), but did not alter surge amplitude, duration, or incidence. The second experiment tested the hypothesis that the delaying effects of endotoxin on the LH surge depend on when endotoxin is introduced relative to the onset of the estradiol signal. Previous work in the ewe has shown that a 14-h estradiol signal is adequate to generate GnRH and LH surges, which begin 6-8 h later. Thus, we again infused endotoxin for 30 h, but began it 14 h after the onset of the estradiol signal. In contrast to the first experiment, endotoxin given later had no effect on any parameter of the LH surge. In the third experiment, we tested the hypothesis that endotoxin acts during the first 14 h to disrupt the initial activating effects of estradiol. Estradiol was delivered for just 14 h, and endotoxin was infused only during this time. Under these conditions, endotoxin blocked the LH surge in five of eight ewes. In a similar follow-up study, endotoxin again blocked the LH surge in six of seven ewes. We conclude that endotoxin can disrupt the estradiol-induced LH surge by interfering with the early activating effects of the estradiol signal during the first 14 h (reading of the signal). In contrast, endotoxin does not disrupt later stages of signal processing (i.e. events during the interval between estradiol signal delivery and surge onset), nor does it prevent actual hormonal surge output. Thus, endotoxin appears to disrupt estrogen action per se rather than the release of GnRH or LH at the time of the surge.


Endocrinology | 2000

Prostaglandins mediate the endotoxin-induced suppression of pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone and luteinizing hormone secretion in the ewe.

Thomas G. Harris; Deborah F. Battaglia; Martha E. Brown; Morton B. Brown; Nichole E. Carlson; Catherine Viguié; Candace Y. Williams; Fred J. Karsch

Five experiments were conducted to test the hypothesis that PGs mediate the endotoxin-induced inhibition of pulsatile GnRH and LH secretion in the ewe. Our approach was to test whether the PG synthesis inhibitor, flurbiprofen, could reverse the inhibitory effects of endotoxin on pulsatile LH and GnRH secretion in ovariectomized ewes. Exp 1–4 were cross-over experiments in which ewes received either flurbiprofen or vehicle 2 weeks apart. Jugular blood samples were taken for LH analysis throughout a 9-h experimental period. Depending on the specific purpose of the experiment, flurbiprofen or vehicle was administered after 3.5 h, followed by endotoxin, vehicle, or ovarian steroids (estradiol plus progesterone) at 4 h. In Exp 1, flurbiprofen reversed the endotoxin-induced suppression of mean serum LH concentrations and the elevation of body temperature. In Exp 2, flurbiprofen prevented the endotoxin-induced inhibition of pulsatile LH secretion and stimulation of fever, reduced the stimulation of plasma cortis...


Endocrinology | 2002

Temporal Requirements of Thyroid Hormones for Seasonal Changes in LH Secretion

Heather J. Billings; Catherine Viguié; Fred J. Karsch; Robert L. Goodman; John M. Connors; Greg M. Anderson

The transition between breeding and anestrous seasons in ewes is driven by an endogenous rhythm in responsiveness to estradiol negative feedback. One stage of this rhythm, the transition to anestrus, requires the presence of thyroid hormone during a window of responsiveness that opens in the late breeding season. The primary goal of this study was to assess when ewes lose responsiveness to thyroid hormone (i.e. when the window closes). In addition, we investigated whether thyroid hormone influences aspects of seasonality other than the transition to anestrus. Ovariectomized ewes maintained in a simulated natural photoperiod were implanted with estradiol, thyroidectomized, and treated with T4 for 100 d beginning at progressively later dates during the anestrous season. Onset of neuroendocrine anestrus (decrease in LH), latency to anestrus, and time of onset of the subsequent neuroendocrine breeding season (rise in LH) were determined. Ewes gradually lost responsiveness to T4 during the latter half of the a...


Biology of Reproduction | 2000

Importance of Photoperiodic Signal Quality to Entrainment of the Circannual Reproductive Rhythm of the Ewe

Graham K. Barrell; Lori A. Thrun; Martha E. Brown; Catherine Viguié; Fred J. Karsch

Abstract An endogenous circannual rhythm drives the seasonal reproductive cycle of a broad spectrum of species. This rhythm is synchronized to the seasons (i.e., entrained) by photoperiod, which acts by regulating the circadian pattern of melatonin secretion from the pineal gland. Prior work has revealed that melatonin patterns secreted in spring/summer entrain the circannual rhythm of reproductive neuroendocrine activity in sheep, whereas secretions in winter do not. The goal of this study was to determine if inability of the winter-melatonin pattern to entrain the rhythm is due to the specific melatonin pattern secreted in winter or to the stage of the circannual rhythm at that time of year. Either a summer- or a winter-melatonin pattern was infused for 70 days into pinealectomized ewes, centered around the summer solstice, when an effective stimulus readily entrains the rhythm. The ewes were ovariectomized and treated with constant-release estradiol implants, and circannual cycles of reproductive neuroendocrine activity were monitored by serum LH concentrations. Only the summer-melatonin pattern entrained the circannual reproductive rhythm. The inability of the winter pattern to do so indicates that the mere presence of a circadian melatonin pattern, in itself, is insufficient for entrainment. Rather, the characteristics of the melatonin pattern, in particular a pattern that mimics the photoperiodic signals of summer, determines entrainment of the circannual rhythm of reproductive neuroendocrine activity in the ewe.


BMC Neuroscience | 2003

Changes in the 5-HT2A receptor system in the pre-mammillary hypothalamus of the ewe are related to regulation of LH pulsatile secretion by an endogenous circannual rhythm

Philippe Chemineau; Agnès Daveau; Jean Pelletier; B. Malpaux; Fred J. Karsch; Catherine Viguié

BackgroundWe wanted to determine if changes in the expression of serotonin 2A receptor (5HT2A receptor) gene in the premammillary hypothalamus are associated with changes in reproductive neuroendocrine status. Thus, we compared 2 groups of ovariectomized-estradiol-treated ewes that expressed high vs low LH pulsatility in two different paradigms (2 groups per paradigm): (a) refractoriness (low LH secretion) or not (high LH secretion) to short days in pineal-intact Ile-de-France ewes (RSD) and (b) endogenous circannual rhythm (ECR) in free-running pinealectomized Suffolk ewes in the active or inactive stage of their reproductive rhythm.ResultsIn RSD ewes, density of 5HT2A receptor mRNA (by in situ hybridization) was significantly higher in the high LH group (25.3 ± 1.4 vs 21.4 ± 1.5 grains/neuron, P < 0.05) and 3H-Ketanserin binding (a specific radioligand) of the median part of the premammillary hypothalamus tended to be higher in the high group (29.1 ± 4.0 vs 24.6 ± 4.2 fmol/mg tissu-equivalent; P < 0.10). In ECR ewes, density of 5HT2A receptor mRNA and 3H-Ketanserin binding were both significantly higher in the high LH group (20.8 ± 1.6 vs 17.0 ± 1.5 grains/neuron, P < 0.01, and 19.7 ± 5.0 vs 7.4 ± 3.4 fmol/mg tissu-equivalent; P < 0.05, respectively).ConclusionsWe conclude that these higher 5HT2A receptor gene expression and binding activity of 5HT2A receptor in the premammillary hypothalamus are associated with stimulation of LH pulsatility expressed before the development of refractoriness to short days and prior to the decline of reproductive neuroendocrine activity during expression of the endogenous circannual rhythm.


Endocrinology | 2001

Potential for polysialylated form of neural cell adhesion molecule-mediated neuroplasticity within the gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurosecretory system of the ewe

Catherine Viguié; Heiko T. Jansen; J. D. Glass; M. Watanabe; Heather J. Billings; Lique M. Coolen; Michael N. Lehman; Fred J. Karsch

The GnRH neurosecretory system undergoes marked structural and functional changes throughout life. The initial goal of this study was to examine the neuroanatomical relationship between GnRH neurons and a glycoprotein implicated in neuroplasticity, the polysialylated form of neural cell adhesion molecule (PSA-NCAM). Using dual label immunocytochemistry in conjunction with confocal microscopy, we determined that fibers, terminals, and perikarya of GnRH neurons in adult ovariectomized ewes are intimately associated with PSA-NCAM. In the preoptic area, intense PSA-NCAM immunoreactivity was evident around the periphery of GnRH cell bodies. The second goal of this study was to determine whether PSA-NCAM expression associated with GnRH neurons varies in conjunction with seasonal changes in the activity of the GnRH neurosecretory system in ovariectomized ewes treated with constant release implants of estradiol. During the breeding season when reproductive neuroendocrine activity was enhanced, the expression of P...

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Philippe Chemineau

François Rabelais University

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