Saturday, December 27, 2025
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

    High salt ups heart disease risk in diabetics

    High salt ups heart disease risk in diabetics
    People with Type-2 diabetes have more to add to their list of dietary restrictions as researchers have found that a high salt diet may double their risk of developing...

    High salt ups heart disease risk in diabetics

    Indian scientists craft portable blood-disorder detection kit

    Indian scientists craft portable blood-disorder detection kit
    Harnessing the technology that powers new-age mobile phones, Indian scientists are set to develop a portable and affordable kit - a lab-on-a-chip - detection...

    Indian scientists craft portable blood-disorder detection kit

    Vaccine for dust-mite allergies

    Vaccine for dust-mite allergies
    If you are allergic to dust mites, here comes the help. Researchers have now developed a vaccine that can combat dust-mite allergies by switching on the...

    Vaccine for dust-mite allergies

    Condom that neutralises HIV virus gets clearance

    Condom that neutralises HIV virus gets clearance
    Australian authorities have approved a condom developed in the country which contains a substance that destroys AIDS-causing HIV and other sexually transmitted...

    Condom that neutralises HIV virus gets clearance

    Heart attacks kill younger women faster than men: Study

    Heart attacks kill younger women faster than men: Study
    Aakriti Gupta, an Indian-origin researcher at the Yale School of Medicine, has found that women have longer hospital stays and are more likely than men to die in the...

    Heart attacks kill younger women faster than men: Study

    Scientists spot 108 genes linked to schizophrenia

    Scientists spot 108 genes linked to schizophrenia
    Hundreds of researchers from the PGC pooled samples from more than 1,50,000 people, of whom 36,989 had been diagnosed with schizophrenia....

    Scientists spot 108 genes linked to schizophrenia