The effects of feeding a diet restricted in energy on the endocrine mechanisms regulating LH secretion in prepubertal heifers were examined. On Day 0, thirty heifers were assigned to be either ovariectomized (OVX; n = 10), ovariectomized and administered an estradiol implant (OVXE; n = 10), or to remain ovary-intact (INT, n = 10). Five heifers each were then assigned to be fed either a control (C) or a two-phase, low-to-high energy (L), dietary treatment. The C diet was formulated to support weight gains of 1.1 kg/day throughout the experiment (Day 0-197). Heifers receiving the L treatment were provided a diet restricted in energy (33% of C diet) from Day 0-127 followed by a diet similar to that fed to heifers receiving the C treatment from Day 128-197. Secretion of LH increased rapidly following ovariectomy in C-OVX and L-OVX heifers. During the period of energy restriction, LH pulse frequency was reduced, and mean LH concentration, pulse amplitude, and pituitary response to LHRH were greater in L-OVX than in C-OVX heifers. In L-OVXE and L-INT heifers, secretion of LH was low and unchanged during the period of dietary energy restriction. In contemporaneous treatment groups fed the C diet (C-OVXE and C-INT), frequency of LH pulses increased gradually during this period and C-INT heifers attained puberty on Day 121 +/- 18. Upon switching heifers in the L-OVX, L-OVXE, and L-INT treatments to the C diet, all characteristics of LH secretion changed markedly within 14 days to levels similar to those detected in the C treatments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)