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1.
Forty-four crossbred postpubertal bovine females were used to study how mating with a bull affected estradiol-17beta (E(2)) secretion and timing of the preovulatory LH surge. Estrous cycles were synchronized with two injections of prostaglandin-F(2alpha) (PGF(2alpha)) 11 d apart. Females were either isolated from males (NE) or exposed to epididectomized bulls (BE) after the second PGF(2alpha) injection. Females exposed to bulls were allowed to mate once and then were separated from the bull. Blood samples were collected at 2-h intervals from the second PGF(2alpha) injection until 12-h post injection to monitor progesterone (P(4)) and luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations and at hourly intervals from 12 h to 60 h post-injection to monitor LH secretion and timing of the preovulatory LH surge. Samples were also collected at 4-h intervals until 60 h post-injection to monitor estrogen (E(2)) secretion. LH surges were detected in 16 and 14 of 22 females from the BE and NE groups, respectively, during the 60-h period after PGF(2alpha) injection Mean P(4) concentrations and time of P(4) decline to <1 ng/ml were not different between the two treatment groups (P>0.30). Mean E(2) concentration during the 60-h sampling period was different (P<0.003) between BE and NE groups, and a significant treatment effect (P<0.002) occurred 48 h, 52 h and 60 h after the second PGF(2alpha) injection. However, mean LH concentration before the LH surge, duration of the LH surge and peak LH concentration during the surge were not different between the BE and NE groups (P>0.40). Mean time for the second PGF(2alpha) injection to the beginning of the LH surge was 51.6 +/- 1.5 h (X +/- S E) for the females not exposed to bulls and 48.5 +/- 1.4 h for females exposed to bulls (P>0.14). In this study, the presence of and/or mating by a bull did not affect LH secretion or timing of the preovulatory LH surge after PGF(2alpha) administration.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of 4 estrus synchronization treatments on intervals to and synchrony of estrus and ovulation, on timing of the preovulatory LH surge and associated changes in plasma progesterone, LH, FSH, and 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) were investigated in 48 Bos indicus cows. Treatment 1 consisted of 2 injections of PGF(2alpha) 14 d apart (n = 12); Treatment 2 of a subcutaneous 3-mg norgestomet implant and an intramuscular injection of 3 mg of norgestomet and 5 mg estradiol valerate, with the implant removed 10 d later (n = 12; norgestomet-estradiol); Treatment 3 of norgestomet-estradiol, with a subcutaneous injection of PMSG given at time of implant removal (Day 10; n = 12); and Treatment 4 of norgestomet implant (as for Treatments 2 and 3) inserted for 10 d, with an intramuscular injection of PGF(2alpha) given at the time of implant removal (n = 12). The experiment was conducted in 2 replicates (24 cows/replicate, 6 cows/group). Estrus, ovulation and timing of the preovulatory surge of LH varied less in cows treated with norgestomet-estradiol and PMSG than in cows in Treatments 1 and 4 (P < 0.008). Treatment with PMSG reduced variation in ovulation times and timing of the LH surge in cows treated with norgestomet-estradiol (P < 0.02). Concentrations of E(2) were higher in cows in Treatments 2 and 3 on the final day of treatment and at about 6 h post ovulation compared with cows in Treatments 1 and 4 (P < 0.05). Different methods for synchronizing estrus did not alter sequential endocrine and behavioral changes in relation to the timing of the LH peak, and the results were consistent with current recommendations for insemination times in Bos taurus cattle.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of PACAP38 on the LH surge and ovulation was compared with that of PACAP27 and VIP in the same model. The peptides were administered intracerebroventricularly before the critical period of the proestrous stage. PACAP38 was able to inhibit ovulation and to prevent the preovulatory LH surge; however, PACAP27 did not inhibit the ovulation and VIP inhibited the ovulation in 2/11 animals. In those animals of the last two groups in which ovulation occurred, the preovulatory LH surge was higher than in control rats. It is speculated that the opposite effect of PACAP38 and PACAP27 on the preovulatory LH surge and ovulation is possibly mediated through different receptors.  相似文献   

4.
Intraventricular injection of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) into female rats at 11:00 h on the day of proestrus inhibited the preovulatory surge of luteinizing hormone (LH) and ovulation. A similar response was observed after the activation of the serotonergic system by stimulation of the median raphe nucleus. A diurnal rhythm of these responses was observed. In rats acclimated to a 14-h:10-h light:dark cycle the potency of 5-HT to inhibit the LH surge and ovulation was 2.06 and 2.3 times greater, respectively, when injected at 11:00 h than at 13:00 h. Also stimulation of the median raphe nucleus at 11:00 h was significantly more effective in inhibiting these parameters than stimulation at 13:00 h. Similarly, the ability of gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA) to inhibit the preovulatory LH surge and ovulation was greater in rats injected in the morning than in the afternoon. The results of this study indicate that during proestrus the sensitivity of 5-HT and GABA to induce inhibition of preovulatory LH release and ovulation shows daily variations with maximal effect before the critical period.  相似文献   

5.
Binding of 125I-prolactin (Prl) to hamster ovarian homogenates was found to decrease markedly at the time of the preovulatory gonadotropin surge (PGS). Saturation analysis revealed that the decrease was due to a reduction in the number of available Prl receptors and not due to a change in binding affinity. Loss of Prl receptors following the PGS was not affected by treatment with ergocryptine to block the release of pituitary Prl, indicating that the reduction in the number of available Prl receptors was not due to increased occupancy by endogenous Prl. Loss of Prl receptors was prevented by treatment with phenobarbital (Phen) to block the normal luteinizing hormone (LH)/follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) surge; whereas, an injection of 50 micrograms of LH or 50 micrograms FSH (but not 100 micrograms Prl) induced a marked decrease in Prl receptors in Phen-treated hamsters. To determine whether Prl receptor loss induced by 50 micrograms FSH might be due to LH contamination, Phen-treated hamsters were injected with minimal ovulatory doses of LH and FSH. Injection of 5 micrograms or 2.5 micrograms LH induced a loss of Prl receptors in 90% and 70% of Phen-treated hamsters, respectively. In contrast, injection of 5 micrograms or 2.5 micrograms FSH induced a loss of Prl receptors in 0% and 20% of Phen-treated hamsters, respectively. These results indicate that the PGS causes an acute heterologous down regulation of ovarian Prl receptors and suggest that this down regulation may be due principally to the action of LH.  相似文献   

6.
Autoradiographic histochemistry was employed to examine changes in the binding of 125I-labeled prolactin (Prl) to ovaries from proestrous hamsters before (at 1200 h), during (at 1600 h), and after (at 2000 h) the preovulatory gonadotropin surge. In untreated control hamsters, there was a marked and progressive loss of Prl binding, first in the interstitial cells and follicular thecae by 1600 h, and then in the granulosa cells of the preovulatory follicles by 2000 h. When proestrous hamsters were treated with ergocryptine to significantly lower serum Prl, or injected with exogenous Prl, Prl binding to their ovaries did not differ from controls, suggesting that decreased Prl binding was due to neither increased occupancy of binding sites by endogenous Prl nor down regulation of Prl receptors by Prl itself. Conversely, when proestrous hamsters were treated with phenobarbital to block the luteinizing hormone (LH)/follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) surge, the loss of Prl binding sites in the ovaries was prevented, suggesting that the LH/FSH surge might initiate a down regulation of Prl receptors in the ovary. Such a down regulation of Prl receptors may serve as a mechanism by which the ability of Prl to affect periovulatory events in the ovary might be regulated.  相似文献   

7.
A GnRH antagonist (Antarelix) treatment was used during the breeding season of Romanov ewes, to investigate whether LH pulses are required the day before the preovulatory surge for normal early embryo development in vivo (Expt 1) and in vitro (Expt 2). In Expt 1, at the onset of oestrus after removal of a fluorogestone acetate sponge, group A0.5 (n = 22) received a subcutaneous injection of 0.5 mg Antarelix, and ovulation was induced with an intravenous injection of 3 mg pig LH 24 h later. The control group (group C, n = 20) were untreated. All ewes were mated naturally at 36 and 48 h after oestrus and embryos were recovered 8 days after sponge removal. There were significant differences in the decrease in LH and in the increase in FSH concentration after Antarelix treatment between treated and control groups. The ovulation rate and embryo recovery rate were not significantly different between the two groups but the blastocyst rate was lower (P < 0.0001) in group A0.5 than in group C, with more unfertilized or degenerated oocytes in group A0.5 (69.2%). In Expt 2, 24 h after sponge removal, group A (n = 10) and group B (n = 10) received one subcutaneous injection of 0.5 mg Antarelix. The control group (group C, n = 10) was left untreated. LH pulsatility was re-established in group B with hourly intravenous injections of 5 micrograms ovine LH for 24 h. Oocytes were collected by flushing the oviducts 28 h after the LH surge, and were fertilized and cultured in vitro for 7 days. Ovulation and cleavage rates were not significantly different among the three groups but a higher rate of blastocysts (P < 0.01) was obtained after Antarelix treatment when LH pulsatility was re-established (group B). Oestradiol concentration was strongly depressed (P < 0.0003) after Antarelix treatment in group A, but was maintained after injection of LH pulses in group B, although at a lower value than before the preovulatory surge in the control group. In conclusion, inhibition of endogenous LH pulses 1 day before the preovulatory surge was not essential for ovulation and in vitro fertilization but was associated with a decrease in plasma oestradiol concentrations and inferior embryo development both in vivo and in vitro. When LH pulsatility was re-established, oestradiol concentrations increased and embryo development was restored.  相似文献   

8.
The preovulatory surge of gonadotropins induces meiotic maturation of the oocyte, the follicular/luteal phase shift in hormone production, and ovulation. This complex and rapid series of developmental changes is difficult to study in large mammals, such as primates and ruminants, because variability in the length of individual reproductive cycles makes it virtually impossible to predict the time of the LH surge. We have validated an experimental model for inducing the LH surge and ovulation in cattle and used it to study the sequence of changes in hormone secretion and some of the mechanisms of these changes. Luteolysis and a follicular phase were induced by injection of prostaglandin F(2alpha); injection of a GnRH analogue 36 h later induced an LH surge and ovulation. The LH surge peaked 2 h after GnRH and ovulation followed 22-31 h after the surge, consistent with the periovulatory interval in natural cycles. The ensuing luteal phase was normal, both in length and in concentrations of circulating progesterone. In experiment I, the uteroovarian effluent was collected, via cannulation of the vena cava, at frequent intervals relative to GnRH injection. Circulating estradiol declined progressively after GnRH, reaching a nadir by 8-10 h before ovulation, whereas concentrations of androstenedione and testosterone remained constant. In experiment II, preovulatory follicles were obtained at 0, 3.5, 6, 12, 18, or 24 h after GNRH: Concentrations of androgens and estradiol were measured in follicular fluid and medium from cultures of follicle wall (theca + granulosa cells); steady-state levels of mRNA for 17alpha-hydroxylase (17alphaOH) and P450 aromatase were measured in follicular tissue. Shortly after the LH surge (3.5 h post-GnRH) there was an acute increase in the capacity of follicular tissue to secrete androstenedione, but not estradiol, in vitro. Thereafter, both androgens and estradiol declined, both in follicular fluid and in medium collected from cultures of follicle wall. Levels of mRNA for 17alphaOH and aromatase in follicle wall decreased significantly by 6 h after GnRH, suggesting that declining levels of these enzymes underlie the decreases in steroid production by follicular cells. These results show that in cattle the preovulatory decrease in follicular estradiol production is mediated by redundant mechanisms, because androgen production and the capacity of granulosa cells to convert androgens to estradiol decline coordinately, in concert with decreases in mRNA for 17alphaOH and P450 aromatase.  相似文献   

9.
The temporal relationships of serum prolactin, oestrogen and LH concentrations during the perioestrous period were compared in prepubertal gilts induced to ovulate by PMSG and hCG and in mature gilts. In Exp. 1, 2 sustained prolactin surges, beginning 4 days and 1 day before the preovulatory LH surge, occurred in all mature gilts. A single preovulatory prolactin surge occurred in 3 prepubertal gilts, starting just before the preovulatory LH surge, but 4 prepubertal gilts had neither a prolactin nor an LH surge. A status (prepubertal or mature) versus time interaction (P less than 0.01) was detected for serum prolactin concentrations. A preovulatory oestrogen surge occurred in all gilts but was of lesser magnitude (P less than 0.01) and duration (P less than 0.05) in the prepubertal gilts without prolactin and LH surges compared to mature gilts and of lesser magnitude (P less than 0.01) compared to prepubertal gilts with prolactin and LH surges. The relative timing of the oestrogen surge in prepubertal gilts corresponded with that of mature gilts when adjusted to the LH surge (if present) but was delayed (P less than 0.01) in all prepubertal gilts if standardized to the hCG injection. In Exp. 2, mature gilts were examined to determine whether 2 perioestrous prolactin surges were characteristic of all cycling gilts. Of 9 gilts, 8 exhibited an initial prolactin surge 4-5 days before oestrus and 5/9 gilts exhibited a periovulatory prolactin surge. The presence of 2 perioestrous serum prolactin surges was not a requirement for subsequent pregnancy maintenance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Administration of charcoal-treated bovine follicular fluid to Damline ewes twice daily (i.v.) from Days 1 to 11 of the luteal phase (Day 0 = oestrus) resulted in a delay in the onset of oestrous behaviour and a significant increase in ovulation rate following cloprostenol-induced luteolysis on Day 12. During follicular fluid treatment plasma levels of FSH in samples withdrawn just before injection of follicular fluid at 09:00 h (i.e. 16 h after previous injection of follicular fluid) were initially suppressed, but by Day 8 of treatment had returned to those of controls. However, the injection of follicular fluid at 09:00 h on Day 8 still caused a significant suppression of FSH as measured during a 6-h sampling period. Basal LH levels were higher throughout treatment due to a significant increase in amplitude and frequency of pulsatile secretion. After cloprostenol-induced luteal regression at the end of treatment on Day 12, plasma levels of FSH increased 4-fold over those of controls and remained higher until the preovulatory LH surge. While LH concentrations were initially higher relative to those of controls, there was no significant difference in the amount of LH released immediately before or during the preovulatory surge. These results suggest that the increase in ovulation rate observed during treatment with bovine follicular fluid is associated with the change in the pattern of gonadotrophin secretion in the luteal and follicular phases of the cycle.  相似文献   

11.
Secretion of platelet-activating factor by periovulatory ovine follicles   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Secretion of platelet-activating factor (PAF) in vitro by ovine follicles and ovarian interstitium obtained at various times before, during and after the endogenous preovulatory surge of luteinizing hormone (LH) and ovulation was quantified by radioimmunoassay. Release of PAF by the preovulatory follicle increased within 2 h after initiation of the surge of LH. Capacity for secretion of PAF was greatest at the time of ovulation, then declined thereafter. Production of PAF by ovarian interstitium throughout the periovulatory period was relatively low and did not change with time. It appears that PAF could act as an intrafollicular mediator in the mechanisms of ovulation and(or) luteinization.  相似文献   

12.
In Exp. 1, PMSG was injected to 26-day-old prepubertal rats to induce ovulations. On Day 2 (2 days later, the equivalent of the day of pro-oestrus) they received at 08:00 h 5 mg hydroxyflutamide or vehicle and at 12:00 h 2 mg progesterone or testosterone or vehicle. Animals were killed at 18:00 h on Day 2 or at 09:00 h on Day 3. Progesterone but not testosterone restored the preovulatory LH surge and ovulation in hydroxyflutamide-treated rats. In Exp. 2, 2 mg progesterone or testosterone were injected between 10:30 and 11:00 h on Day 2, to advance the pro-oestrous LH surge and ovulation in PMSG-primed prepubertal rats. Injection of hydroxyflutamide abolished the ability of progesterone to advance the LH surge or ovulation. Testosterone did not induce the advancement of LH surge or ovulation. In Exp. 3, ovariectomized prepubertal rats implanted with oestradiol-17 beta showed significantly (P less than 0.01) elevated serum LH concentrations at 18:00 h over those observed at 10:00 h. Progesterone injection to these animals further elevated the serum LH concentrations at 18:00 h, in a dose-dependent manner, with maximal values resulting from 1 mg progesterone. Hydroxyflutamide treatment significantly (P less than 0.003) reduced the serum LH values in rats receiving 0-1 mg progesterone but 2 mg progesterone were able to overcome this inhibition. It is concluded that progesterone but not testosterone can reverse the effects of hydroxyflutamide on the preovulatory LH surge and ovulation. It appears that hydroxyflutamide may interfere with progesterone action in induction of the LH surge, suggesting a hitherto undescribed anti-progestagenic action of hydroxyflutamide.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of third ventricular injection of beta-endorphin (beta-EP) on spontaneous, brain stimulation-induced and estrogen-induced LH surges were studied in the adult female rat. It was found that beta-EP blocked the preovulatory surge of LH release and ovulation, while it did not affect LH release in response to LH-RH injection. The site of the beta-EP blockade of ovulation was proved to be in the brain. Beta-EP completely blocked ovulatory LH release induced by the electrochemical stimulation of the medial amygdaloid nucleus and medial septum-diagonal band of Broca, but failed to block ovulation due to the stimulation of the medial preoptic area (MPO) or median eminence, though serum LH levels after the MPO stimulation were inhibited by beta-EP. In the spayed rats treated with estradiol benzoate (EB) on Day 1 and 4 of experiment, beta-EP given on Day 5 blocked the LH surge that normally occurred on that day and led to a compensatory surge of LH on the following day. Moreover, the LH surge on Day 5 was inhibited by beta-EP given either on Day 1 or Day 4. Present data suggest that beta-EP may act in inhibiting the preovulatory LH surges not only by suppressing the preoptic-tuberal LH-RH activities but also by affecting the initiation and development of stimulatory feedback of estrogen in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

14.
Experiments were conducted to investigate hypophyseal and follicular competency at two distinct stages of the hen's egg laying sequence: 1) 14 h prior to the first (C1) ovulation of a sequence (27 h following the previous ovulation); and 2) 14 h prior to the second (C2) ovulation of a sequence (13 h following the previous ovulation). When a single dose of mammalian luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (mLHRH) or chicken luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (cLHRH) was injected 14 h prior to a C1 ovulation, premature ovulation was induced in 19 of 20 hens. In contrast, ovulation was premature in only 1 of 20 hens when mLHRH or cLHRH was injected 14 h prior to a C2 ovulation. There was no difference between the two stages of the sequence in the amount of luteinizing hormone (LH) released for up to 60 min following a single i.v. injection of 20 micrograms mLHRH. However, only prior to a C1 ovulation did LH levels further increase to reach preovulatory concentrations. By contrast, progesterone (P4) concentrations were increased within the first 60 min to a lesser extent in hens injected prior to a C2 ovulation compared to a C1 ovulation. In C2-injected birds, P4 fell to levels that were not different from vehicle-injected controls by 45 to 60 min following injection, whereas P4 secretion was maintained in hens injected prior to a C1 ovulation. We suggest that the lack of sustained LH secretion following treatment with either species of LHRH 14 h prior to a C2 ovulation is related to follicular immaturity with respect to ability to produce and secrete P4. At the dosage administered, there was no difference in the ability of mLHRH compared to cLHRH to release LH at either stage of the sequence. Finally, two successive injections of mLHRH at 14 and 13 h prior to a C2 ovulation induced premature ovulation in 6 of 11 hens. It is suggested that LH, and possibly P4, exerts a priming effect on the largest preovulatory follicle to initiate fully potentiated P4 production and secretion.  相似文献   

15.
Oestrous cycles were induced in seasonally anoestrous ewes by introducing rams into the flock and giving to the ewes one intramuscular injection of 20 mg progesterone. At the second ovulation the onset of oestrus and the preovulatory surge of luteinizing hormone (LH) were recorded. It was found that the LH surge began in significantly more ewes during the night (79%) than during the day (21%). The onset of oestrus tended to follow a similar pattern. This temporal pattern was not related to the time of ram introduction, but may be the result of daily rhythms in ovarian activity. Furthermore, a preferred period for the LH surge indicates a preferred period for ovulation and this may be important in deciding when to begin artificial insemination.  相似文献   

16.
The pattern of change in plasma progesterone and LH concentrations was monitored in Clun Forest ewes at a natural oestrus and compared to that observed after removal of progesterone implants. The rate of decline in plasma progesterone concentrations after implant withdrawal (1.8 +/- 0.2 ng/ml h-1) was significantly greater (P less than 0.001) than that observed at natural luteolysis (0.2 +/- 0.1 ng/ml h-1), and this resulted in an abnormal pattern of change in tonic LH secretion up to the time of the preovulatory LH surge. This more rapid rate of progesterone removal was also associated with a shortening of the intervals from the time that progesterone concentrations attained basal values to the onset of oestrus (P less than 0.05) and the onset of the preovulatory LH surge (P less than 0.01). However, there were no significant differences in the duration of the LH peak, preovulatory peak LH concentration, ovulation rate or the pattern of progesterone concentrations in the subsequent cycle. It is suggested that the abnormal patterns of change in progesterone and tonic LH concentrations may be one factor involved in the impairment of sperm transport and abnormal patterns of oestradiol secretion known to occur at a synchronized oestrus.  相似文献   

17.
The objective of the study was to determine the timing of ovulation in relation to onset of estrus and the preovulatory LH peak in yaks. For this purpose, a sensitive LH enzymeimmunoassay previously established in buffaloes was successfully validated for measuring the hormone in yak plasma. Plasma LH and progesterone were estimated from blood samples collected from eight non-lactating cycling yaks at 2 h intervals after estrus onset until 6 h after ovulation (ovulation was confirmed by palpation of ovaries per rectum). The mean+/-S.E.M. preovulatory plasma LH peak was 10.11+/-0.35 ng/ml with the values ranging from 8.75 to 11.51 ng/ml in individual yaks. The mean+/-S.E.M. duration of the LH surge was 7.25+/-0.55 h with a range of 6-10 h. Onset of LH surge (mean+/-S.E.M.) occurred 3.0+/-0.65 h after the onset of estrus. Mean plasma progesterone stayed low (<0.25 ng/ml) during the entire duration of sampling. Ovulation occurred 30.5+/-0.82 h (range, 28-34 h) after the onset of estrus and 20.25+/-1.03 h after the end of LH surge. The occurrence of the LH peaks within a narrow time frame of 4-8h post estrus onset in yaks could have contributed to the animals ovulating within a narrow time interval.  相似文献   

18.
Diameter of the preovulatory follicle, plasma concentrations of LH and estradiol, and vascularization of the follicle wall, based on color-Doppler signals, were characterized in 40 pony mares for 6 days preceding ovulation (Days -6 to -1; preovulatory period). Comparisons between the preovulatory periods preceding the first compared with a later ovulation during the year were used to study the relationships between LH and estradiol and between vascularization and estradiol. Diameter of the preovulatory follicle was greater (P<0.02) and concentration of LH was less (P<0.02) during the first preovulatory period, whereas concentration of estradiol was not different between the first and second preovulatory periods. Vascularized area (cm(2)) of the follicle wall increased at a reduced rate during the first preovulatory period, as indicated by an interaction (P<0.03) between day and group. Vascularized area was similar between the preovulatory groups on Day -6, and a reduced rate of increase resulted in a lesser (P<0.001) area on Day -1 before the first ovulation (1.4+/-0.1cm(2)) than before a later ovulation (2.2+/-0.2 cm(2)). Results demonstrated that follicle vascularization and the LH surge were attenuated preceding the first ovulation of the year with no indication that estradiol was involved in the differences between the first and later ovulations.  相似文献   

19.
Aminoglutethimide (AG), an inhibitor of steroidogenesis, was administered s.c. to 5 groups of laying hens at a dose of 200 mg AG/kg body weight 9 h before expected midsequence ovulation. This dose has previously been demonstrated to consistently block ovulation. The injection of AG was followed by s.c. injections of: Group 1, 1.0 mg progesterone; Group 2, 0.1 mg estradiol-17 beta; Group 3, 1.5 mg corticosterone, all at 6 h prior to expected ovulation; Group 4, 1.0 mg testosterone at both 8 h and 5 h before expected ovulation; and Group 5, 25 micrograms of ovine luteinizing hormone (LH) at 8 and 50 micrograms ovine LH at 6 h before expected ovulation. For each group, 4 control hens were injected with AG and the appropriate vehicle. Blood samples were taken at 1- or 2-h intervals from the time of AG injection to the expected time of ovulation. The hens were killed 4 h after expected ovulation and examined for the occurrence of ovulation. In all hens injected with vehicle, ovulation and the preovulatory surges of progesterone, testosterone, estradiol-17 beta and LH were inhibited. The plasma concentration of corticosterone was not reduced following an injection of AG. Four of 6 hens ovulated in response to injection of ovine LH, although neither endogenous LH nor progesterone were released. Thus, LH appears to play a direct role in follicular rupture and extrusion of the ovum. The administration of progesterone induced a significant and prolonged rise in LH, restoring AG-blocked ovulation in all hens treated (n = 6). Injections of testosterone restored LH release in all hens and ovulation in 2 of 7 hens treated. Three of 7 hens ovulated in response to the corticosterone injection. A preovulatory rise in LH was not observed, indicating that corticosterone may exert its ovulation-inducing effect directly on the mature follicle. Estradiol-17 beta did not restore LH release or ovulation in any of the hens treated with AG.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of episodic LH pulses before and subsequent to ovulation on size and function of the corpus luteum (CL) in cattle was examined. Treatments were 1) control; 2) LHRH antagonist starting 2 days before the preovulatory LH surge (Antagonist [Ant] -2); 3) LHRH antagonist at initiation of the preovulatory LH surge (Ant 0); and 4) LHRH antagonist starting 2 days after the preovulatory LH surge (Ant 2). Treatments with an LHRH antagonist were continued until 7 days after the preovulatory surge. Diameter of the CL and concentrations of progesterone were monitored during the luteal phase that ensued after treatment. Maximum average diameters of CL were 9.5, 17.5, 21.6, and 28.8 mm for females from the Ant -2, Ant 0, Ant 2, and control groups, respectively (P < 0. 01). Compared with those in control animals, concentrations of progesterone in plasma were less (P < 0.01) in animals in which release of LH pulses was inhibited by treatment with antagonist. Arbitrary units under the curve for concentrations of progesterone during the luteal phase of the estrous cycle for Ant -2, Ant 0, Ant 2, and control groups were 19.6, 41.6, 43.6, and 142.2, respectively. There was no difference in circulating concentrations of progesterone (P > 0.1) among antagonist-treated groups. In conclusion, episodic release of LH pulses before, during, and after the time of the preovulatory surge of LH may stimulate development and function of the CL in cattle.  相似文献   

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