David A. Damassa
Tufts University
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Featured researches published by David A. Damassa.
Hormones and Behavior | 1977
David A. Damassa; Erla R. Smith; Barbara Tennent; Julian M. Davidson
Abstract The relationships between plasma testosterone (T) and various parameters of male sexual behavior were examined in intact and castrated T-treated male rats. Repeated blood sampling and behavioral testing revealed no correlation between any measure of sexual behavior and plasma T in normal untreated sexually active males. T-Filled Silastic capsules, implanted subcutaneously at the time of castration, were found to produce plasma T levels proportional to capsule size. Plasma T titers less than 10% of normal (0.2 ng/ml) maintained ejaculatory behavior near normal levels for the 58 days of the experiment. Measures of sexual behavior which showed androgen dependence were intromission latency, postejaculatory interval, and intromission frequency. The plasma T concentration required to maintain these parameters within the intact range was 0.7 ng/ml, which is less than one-third of the mean intact level (2.6 ng/ml). No significant improvement in the sex behavior measures was seen with plasma T levels between 0.7 and 3.1 ng/ml. It was concluded that the absence of relationships between circulating T and sexual behavior in the normal rat population is due to the androgen requirement for this behavior being less than the amount normally present. Findings on T levels and T treatment in noncopulator males are also presented.
Neuroendocrinology | 1978
Gary D. Gray; Erla R. Smith; David A. Damassa; J.R.L. Ehrenkranz; Julian M. Davidson
Neuroendocrine mechanisms involved in the reduction of testosterone (T) levels induced by the chronic surgical stress of s.c. gauze implantation were investigated in male rats. The reduction resulted from a decline in T secretion and not an increase in clearance of the hormone from the circulation. In most cases, the decrement was accompanied by a reduction in LH levels, indicating that decreased LH stimulation is the primary factor mediating the drop in T levels. The suppressive effect of surgical stress on LH and T levels was apparently not mediated by the pituitary-adrenal system.
Hormones and Behavior | 1977
P Södersten; David A. Damassa; Erla R. Smith
Abstract During normal development, the onset of reproductive behavior in male rats was not preceded by any change in plasma testosterone (T) levels. Implantation of Silastic capsules containing T in 14-day-old male rats advanced the onset of all parameters of sexual behavior by 20 days. Implantation of Silastic capsules containing estradiol in 14-day-old male rats stimulated precocious mounting and intromitting, but not ejaculation. Implantation of dihydrotestosterone-filled Silastic capsules in 14-day-old male rats completely inhibited the development of sexual behavior. All hormones suppressed plasma LH levels. These findings in immature male rats are similar to previous findings in adult males. Immature male rats were behaviorally less responsive to T than adult males, and it was suggested that, during development, male rats become progressively more sensitive to the behavior-stimulating effects of circulating T. No effects of copulatory experience on plasma concentration of T or on the weights of testes, penes, or accessory sexual glands were detected.
Life Sciences | 1979
John E. Morley; Shlomo Melmed; Jacqueline Briggs; Harold E. Carlson; Jerome M. Hershman; Travis E. Solomon; C. B. H. W. Lamers; David A. Damassa
Abstract Cholecystokinin-octapeptide (CCK-8)(10−6 to 10−8M) produced a marked increase in growth hormone (GH) release from incubated rat anterior pituitary quarters and from cultured GH3 pituitary tumor cells. Although several CCK-8 analogues also caused GH release, bombesin, secretin and pancreatic polypeptide had no effect on GH secretion in vitro . In the GH3 cell line, CCK-8 (10−7M) reversed the inhibitory effect of somatostatin (10−5M) on GH release. As CCK immunoreactivity has been demonstrated to be present in the hypothalamus, these results suggest that CCK-8 may be a physiologically important growth hormone releasing factor.
Hormones and Behavior | 1979
Joseph Terkel; David A. Damassa; Charles H. Sawyer
Abstract Lactating female rats, separated from their litters for 6 hr, showed a dramatic elevation in plasma prolactin following a 15-min playback of ultrasonic vocalizations recorded from 7-day-old pups. Virgin females exhibited a smaller but still significant prolactin response to recorded pup calls. Control recordings of either background noise or adult ultrasonic vocalizations (22–26 kHz) had no effect on prolactin secretion even in lactating females. These results demonstrate that infant vocalizations can act as a stimulus for prolactin release and suggest that such communications may play a role in the maintenance of normal lactation.
Peptides | 1987
Joan C. King; Gerard Kugel; David J. Zahniser; Karl Wooledge; David A. Damassa; Barry Alexsavich
One day after castration of male rats, plasma LH rose and the number of LHRH immunopositive neuronal perikarya decreased. As plasma LH continued to rise six days and three weeks post-castration, the number of LHRH immunopositive neurons also increased. The largest population of LHRH immunopositive neurons was detected three weeks post-castration and the cell group that showed the greatest increase was in the rostral preoptic area. In females, the largest population of LHRH immunopositive neurons was observed one day post-ovariectomy; at this time plasma LH levels were not significantly elevated above diestrous levels. Six days post-ovariectomy, LH levels were elevated and the number of LHRH immunopositive cells decreased. As LH levels continued to rise three weeks post-ovariectomy, the population increased in size. In males, primarily LHRH cells of the rostral preoptic area increased in in number; in females, the cell groups that increased were scattered over the diagonal band of Broca, preoptic and anterior hypothalamic areas. Although LHRH neurons demonstrated these variations following gonadectomy, there was no evidence of alteration(s) in molecular processing of precursor hormone.
Life Sciences | 1980
John E. Morley; T. Yamada; John H. Walsh; C. B. H. W. Lamers; H. Wong; A. Shulkes; David A. Damassa; Jody Gordon; Harold E. Carlson; Jerome M. Hershman
Abstract This study demonstrates that, during morphine addiction and withdrawal in rats profound alterations in the concentrations of a variety of brain peptides occur. Somatostatin, cholecystokinin, neurotensin and substance P concentrations increased during morphine addiction. Naloxone-induced withdrawal decreased brain concentrations of TRH, somatostatin, neurotensin and substance P. Naloxone alone decreased thalamic substance P and neurotensin concentrations. Vasoactive intestinal peptide concentrations were unaltered by any of the treatments. The fall in the tissue concentration of somatostatin during naloxone-induced withdrawal correlated well with the fall in the circulating growth hormone, suggesting that this could be secondary to somatostatin release. Our data support the hypothesis that brain peptides, acting locally in the brain as neuromodulators, play an important role in the genesis of the syndromes of morphine addiction and withdrawal.
Hormones and Behavior | 1977
Erla R. Smith; David A. Damassa; Julian M. Davidson
Abstract Interpretation of behavioral and other effects of intracranial steroid implants depends on knowledge of the rate of release of the implanted hormones into the general circulation. Testosterone propionate implants (200 μg, pellets) in the median eminence and pituitary were found to result in circulating levels of testosterone (T) twice as high as those in the anterior hypothalamus-preoptic area (AHPOA), posterior hypothalamus (PH), and cortex (Ctx). Implants in all cranial areas examined resulted in plasma T levels in the lower range of circulating T found in normal rats for the first 24 hr postoperatively, decreasing thereafter and reaching very low levels by the end of 2 weeks. There were no significant differences in the plasma T levels in rats with implants in the AHPOA, PH, and Ctx, but AHPOA implants were slightly more effective in restoration of sexual behavior than PH implants, and both of these implants were considerably more effective than those in the cortex. There was no apparent correlation between behavioral responses and peripheral levels of T. The major conclusion of this study was that the effects of hypothalamic implants of T on male sexual behavior cannot be explained by the presence of T in the peripheral circulation.
Life Sciences | 1978
John E. Morley; David A. Damassa; Jody Gordon; A. Eugene Pekary; Jerome M. Hershman
Abstract Rats, when vitamin A deficient, had increased plasma T 3 , T 4 and free thyroxine indexes. Pituitary TSH and hypothalamic TRH content were increased in vitamin A deficient animals compared to pair-fed controls. The plasma TSH response to TRH was normal in the vitamin A deficient rats. Basal prolactin, LH and FSH levels did not differ significantly in the two groups. Both groups had significant increases in LH and FSH after LRH. Vitamin A deficiency produces biochemical hyperthyroidism. Our data are consistent with an abnormality in thyroid hormone feedback on the hypothalamic pituitary axis.
Brain Research | 1984
Joan C. King; Edythe L. P. Anthony; A. W. Gustafson; David A. Damassa
Abstract Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LH-RH) neurons and their projections were studied by immunocytochemistry in the brains of little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus lucifugus: Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) as a first step in the study of relationships between these neurons and the seasonal reproductive events characteristic of this species. The majority of immunoreactive neurons in adult male, adult female, and fetal bats were ovoid bipolar cells with one thin and one thicker process, both of which gave rise to fine varicose fibers. LH-RH-immunoreactive perikarya were concentrated in the region of the arcuate nuclei in all bats examined. Perikarya were also consistently found dispersed in the mammillary region, anterior hypothalamus, preoptic areas, septum, diagonal band of Broca, and olfactory tracts; they were occasionally observed in the dorsal hypothalamus, organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (OVLT), habenula, amygdala, and cingulate gyrus. LH-RH-immunoreactive fibers projected heavily to the median eminence, infundibular stalk, and posterior pituitary. In extrahypothalamic areas, these fibers were especially abundant in the stria medullaris/habenula and stria terminalis/amygdala, but also contributed to the diagonal band of Broca and the olfactory tracts. Immunoreactive fibers that may be components of many different pathways clustered in the rostral septum and permeated the medial hypothalamus. LH-RH-containing fibers frequently entered the subfornical organ, but were observed less often in the OVLT and only occasionally in the pineal. The organization of the LH-RH system in the little brown bat resembles that of primates, but differs considerably from that in the rat. Anatomical characteristics of the LH-RH system in bats thus suggest that this animal may be a particularly suitable species for further study of neuroendocrine control of reproductive function as it may relate to primates, including humans.