The pulsatile release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and its frequency are crucial for healthy reproductive function. To understand what drives GnRH pulses a combination of experimental and mathematical modelling approaches have been used. Early work focussed on the possibility that GnRH pulse generation is an intrinsic feature ...
The pulsatile release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and its frequency are crucial for healthy reproductive function. To understand what drives GnRH pulses a combination of experimental and mathematical modelling approaches have been used. Early work focussed on the possibility that GnRH pulse generation is an intrinsic feature of GnRH neurons, with autocrine feedback generating pulsatility. However, there is now ample evidence suggesting that a network of upstream KNDy (kisspeptin, neurokinin-B and dynorphin) neurons are the source of this GnRH pulse generator. The interplay of slow positive and negative feedback via neurokinin-B and dynorphin respectively allow the network to act as a relaxation oscillator, driving pulsatile secretion of kisspeptin, and consequently, of GnRH and LH. Here we review the mathematical modelling approaches exploring both scenarios and suggest that with pulsatile GnRH secretion driven by the KNDy pulse generator, autocrine feedback still has the potential to modulate GnRH output.