GnRH, or Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone, is a master hormone produced by the hypothalamus in the brain. It plays a central regulatory role in the body’s reproductive system by controlling the release of two critical hormones from the pituitary gland:
- Luteinizing Hormone (LH)
- Follicle-Stimulating Hormone (FSH)
These two hormones then act on the gonads — the ovaries in women and the testes in men — to regulate fertility, sex hormone production, and sexual development.
🧠 How Does GnRH Work?
📍 Origin:
GnRH is secreted in pulses from the hypothalamus and travels through a special blood vessel system (the hypophyseal portal system) to the anterior pituitary gland, where it stimulates the release of:
- LH (Luteinizing Hormone)
- FSH (Follicle-Stimulating Hormone)
These hormones are then released into the bloodstream to act on reproductive organs.
🧬 What Does GnRH Do?
In Women:
- Stimulates LH and FSH, which:
- Trigger follicle development
- Cause estrogen and later progesterone production
- Control ovulation and menstrual cycles
In Men:
- Stimulates LH, which tells Leydig cells in the testes to produce testosterone
- Stimulates FSH, which helps support sperm production
🔁 Pulsatility Matters
The frequency and rhythm of GnRH pulses are essential:
- Normal pulsatile release → Maintains proper LH/FSH balance and fertility
- Constant, non-pulsatile release → Paradoxically suppresses LH and FSH
This principle is important in medical treatments, as we’ll see below.
🧪 Clinical Uses of GnRH (and GnRH analogs)
✅ GnRH Stimulation Test
- Used to diagnose problems with puberty, pituitary function, or fertility
✅ GnRH Agonists (mimic GnRH but overstimulate to suppress the system over time):
Used to suppress reproductive hormone production in conditions like:
- Prostate cancer (in men — lowers testosterone)
- Endometriosis and uterine fibroids (in women — lowers estrogen)
- Precocious puberty (early puberty — slows it down)
- Transgender hormone therapy (to suppress natural sex hormone production)
Examples: leuprolide (Lupron), goserelin (Zoladex), triptorelin
✅ GnRH Antagonists (block GnRH receptors directly):
Used when rapid hormone suppression is needed, often in situations like advanced prostate cancer.
⚠️ Disorders Involving GnRH:
📉 Low GnRH Production:
- Kallmann syndrome: Genetic condition causing delayed or absent puberty (often with no sense of smell)
- Hypothalamic amenorrhea: Seen in athletes, eating disorders, or severe stress — causes missed periods and infertility
- Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism: Low sex hormones due to pituitary/hypothalamic dysfunction
📈 Excess GnRH (rare):
- Often due to a GnRH-secreting tumor (rare)
- Can cause precocious puberty in children
🔬 Summary Table:
Feature | GnRH |
---|---|
Full name | Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone |
Source | Hypothalamus (brain) |
Target | Anterior pituitary gland |
Triggers release of | LH and FSH |
Role in women | Controls ovulation and menstrual cycle |
Role in men | Stimulates testosterone and sperm production |
Medical use | Infertility, hormone suppression, puberty control |
Too little | Infertility, delayed puberty |
Too much (rare) | Early puberty, hormone imbalance |