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1.
The present studies were conducted to determine whether luteinizing hormone (LH), a hormone which increases intracellular cAMP, also increases "second messengers" derived from inositol phospholipid hydrolysis in isolated bovine luteal cells. In luteal cells prelabeled with 32PO4, LH provoked increases in labeling of phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylinositol, and polyphosphatidylinositol (PIP). No reductions in 32P-prelabeled PIP and PIP2 were observed in LH-treated cells. In luteal cells prelabeled with myo-[2-3H]inositol, LH provoked rapid (10-30 s) and sustained (up to 60 min) increases in the levels of inositol mono-, bis-, and trisphosphates (IP, IP2, and IP3, respectively. IP3 was formed more rapidly than IP2 or IP following LH treatment. In addition, LH increased (50%) levels of [3H]inositol phospholipids in 30-min incubations. LiCl (10 mM) enhanced inositol phosphate accumulation in response to LH. Maximal increases in IP3 occurred at 1-10 micrograms/ml of LH. Similar temporal and dose-response relationships were observed for LH-stimulated IP3 and cAMP accumulation. However, exogenous cAMP (8-bromo-cAMP, 5 mM) and forskolin (10 microM) had no effect on inositol phosphate synthesis. The initial (1 min) effects of LH on IP3 and cAMP were independent of extracellular calcium concentrations, whereas the sustained (5 min) effect of LH on IP3, but not cAMP, was dependent on a source of extracellular calcium. LH-stimulated progesterone synthesis was also dependent on the presence of extracellular calcium. LH induced rapid and concentration-dependent increases in [Ca2+]i as measured by Quin 2 fluorescence. The LH-induced increases in [Ca2+]i were maximal within 30 s (approximately 2-fold) and remained elevated for at least 10 min. In Ca2+-free media containing 2 mM [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid, LH was still able to increase [Ca2+]i, but the increase was slightly less in magnitude and of shorter duration (2-4 min). These findings demonstrate that LH can rapidly raise levels of IP3 and [Ca2+]i, as well as, cAMP in bovine luteal cells. These findings suggest that at least two second messenger systems exist to mediate the action of LH in the corpus luteum.  相似文献   

2.
Human chorionic gonadotropin, hCG, a hormone which increases intracellular cAMP, provoked rapid (30 s) and sustained (up to 30 min) increases in the levels of inositol mono-, bis- and trisphosphates (IP, IP2 and IP3, respectively) in bovine luteal cells. LiCl (10 mM) enhanced inositol phosphate accumulation in response to hCG. Concentration-dependent increases in inositol phosphates, cAMP and progesterone accumulation were observed in hCG-treated luteal cells. hCG also induced rapid and concentration-dependent increases in cytosolic free Ca2+ as measured by quin 2 fluorescence. These findings demonstrate that hCG stimulates the phospholipase C-IP3 and diacylglycerol 'second messenger' system in the bovine corpus luteum.  相似文献   

3.
The possible influence of an activator of protein kinase C, the tumor-promoting phorbol ester, PMA (phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate), upon small bovine luteal cell steroidogenesis was investigated in vitro, PMA had no significant effect on basal and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP)-stimulated progesterone production but markedly modulated the LH-stimulated progesterone and cAMP productions. PMA potentiated the LH-stimulated cAMP accumulation whatever the dose of LH used. It also potentiated the LH-induced progesterone production in the presence of low doses of LH. Paradoxically, in the presence of maximal or submaximal effective doses of LH, PMA exerted a time- and dose-dependent inhibition of progesterone synthesis. Diacylglycerol was able to mimic the effects of PMA on LH-induced steroidogenesis. These observations suggest that the Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase C can modulate the regulation by LH of small bovine luteal cell steroidogenesis at a step before the synthesis of cAMP. They also suggest that the interaction between LH and its receptor is able to trigger a negative regulatory signal which would be only expressed for high doses of LH and in the presence of an activator of PKC.  相似文献   

4.
Highly purified preparations of small and large bovine luteal cells were utilized to examine the effects of prostaglandins F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha), E2 (PGE2) and I2 (PGI2) analog on progesterone production. Corpora lutea were obtained from Holstein heifers between days 10 and 12 of the estrous cycle. Purified small and large cells were obtained by unit gravity sedimentation and flow cytometry. Progesterone accumulation was determined in 1 x 10(5) small and 5 x 10(3) large cells after 2 and 4 h incubations respectively. Progesterone synthesis was increased (p less than 0.05) in the small cells by the increasing levels of PGF2 alpha, PGE2, carba-PGI2 and LH. PGF2 alpha, but not PGE2 or carba-PGI2 increased (p less than 0.05) LH-stimulated progesterone production. There was no interaction of various combinations of prostaglandins on progesterone production in the small cells. In the large cells, PGF2 alpha had no effect on basal progesterone production. However, it inhibited LH-stimulated progesterone synthesis. In contrast, PGE2 and carba-PGI2 stimulated (p less than 0.05) basal progesterone production in the large cells. In the presence of LH, high levels of carba-PGI2 inhibited (p less than 0.05) progesterone synthesis. The PGE2 and PGI2-stimulated progesterone production in the large luteal cells was also inhibited in the presence of PGF2 alpha. These data suggest all of the prostaglandins used exert a luteotropic action in the small cells. In the large cells only PGE2 and carba-PGI2 are luteotropic, while PGF2 alpha exerts a luteolytic action. The effects of the prostaglandins in the small and large luteal cells suggest that their receptors are present in both cell types.  相似文献   

5.
The following studies were conducted to determine whether luteinizing hormone (LH), a hormone which increases cellular levels of cyclic AMP, also provokes increases in 'second messengers' derived from inositol lipid metabolism (i.e. inositol phosphates and diacylglycerol). Rat granulosa cells isolated from mature Graafian follicles were prelabelled for 3 h with myo-[2-3H]inositol. LH provoked rapid (5 min) and sustained (up to 60 min) increases in the levels of inositol mono-, bis, and trisphosphates (IP, IP2 and IP3, respectively). Time course studies revealed that IP3 was formed more rapidly than IP2 and IP following LH treatment. The response to LH was concentration-dependent with maximal increases at LH concentrations of 1 microgram/ml. LiCl (2-40 mM) enhanced the LH-provoked accumulation of all [3H]inositol phosphates, presumably by inhibiting the action of inositol phosphate phosphatases. The effectiveness of LH, however, was dependent on the concentration of lithium employed; maximal increases in IP were observed at 10 mM-LiCl, whereas maximal increases in IP2 and IP3 were observed at 20 mM- and 40 mM-LiCl, respectively. The stimulatory effects of LH on inositol phosphate and progesterone accumulation were also compared with changes in cyclic nucleotide levels. LH rapidly increased levels of inositol phosphates, progesterone and cyclic AMP, but transiently reduced levels of cyclic GMP. These results demonstrate that LH increases both cyclic AMP and inositol trisphosphate (and presumably diacylglycerol) in rat granulosa cells. Our findings suggest that two messenger systems exist to mediate the action of LH in granulosa cells.  相似文献   

6.
In addition to increasing cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) levels, luteinizing hormone (LH) stimulation of granulosa results in phosphoinositide hydrolysis producing inositol trisphosphate (IP3) and diacylglycerol. The roles of these putative second messengers were investigated by measuring production of progesterone and inositol phosphates by granulosa from medium-sized porcine follicles (3-7 mm) after 15 min incubation with or without LH (1 microgram/ml), 5 microM dibutyryl cAMP (dbcAMP), or 5 microM 1-oleoyl,2-acetylglycerol (OAG). Compared to a control rate of 5.4 pmoles/10(7) cells/15 min, LH and dbcAMP stimulated progesterone production to 12.8 and 15.9 pmoles, respectively, and OAG decreased progesterone production to 3.7 pmoles. LH also stimulated inositol phosphate (IP) and bisphosphate (IP2) accumulations by approximately 5-fold and IP3 accumulation by 20-fold. In experiments where granulosa were premeabilized with saponin, LH, dbcAMP, and IP3 stimulated progesterone production from 1.3 pmol in control cells to 5.2, 3.2, and 5.1 pmol, respectively, and OAG decreased progesterone production to 1.0 pmol. LH stimulated accumulation of all inositol phosphates in permeabilized cells, whereas the addition of IP3 only increased IP2 and IP3 accumulations. In granulosa preincubated with 0.9 mM [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)] tetraacetic acid, A23187 increased progesterone production from 3.7 to 5.8 pmol. Addition of 1-20 nmoles IP3 to 10(7) granulosa incubated in a Ca2+-free medium increased Ca2+ efflux linearly. These data suggest that IP3 may have a role in regulating steroid production in granulosa by regulating intracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

7.
Two experiments were conducted to determine if a loss in the ability to utilize lipoprotein-cholesterol is one mechanism whereby prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) decreases steroidogenesis in bovine luteal cells. In the first experiment, serum-free cultures of bovine luteal cells were treated with PGF2 alpha (100 ng/ml) for 5 days prior to addition of lipoproteins. Exposure to PGF2 alpha completely suppressed low-density lipoprotein (LDL)- and high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-stimulated progesterone production (p less than 0.01) compared to control (no PGF2 alpha) cultures. Luteal cells cultured in the presence of LDL + luteinizing hormone (LH, 10 ng/ml) + PGF2 alpha produced significantly less progesterone than luteal cells cultured with LDL + LH (p less than 0.05). Treatment with PGF2 alpha had no significant effect on HDL + LH-stimulated progesterone synthesis. In the second experiment, cows were injected with a luteolytic dose of PGF2 alpha (25 mg), and the corpora lutea were removed at 0 (no PG), 1, 4, or 12 h post-injection. Dissociated luteal cells were placed in culture for 7 days, either with or without LH (10 ng/ml), and lipoproteins were added on Days 5-7. LH stimulation of progesterone production was apparent in cultures obtained at 0 and 12 (p less than 0.05) but not 1 and 4 h post-PGF2 alpha. Addition of either LDL or HDL increased progesterone synthesis in all cultures, regardless of time following in vivo administration of PGF2 alpha. It is concluded that PGF2 alpha can inhibit bovine luteal cell utilization of either LDL or HDL in vitro. However, luteal cell utilization of lipoproteins in vitro is not adversely affected by in vivo exposure to PGF2 alpha, if collected within 12 h post-PGF2 alpha.  相似文献   

8.
Minced luteal tissue of bovine corpora lutea from Day 4, 5, and 6 of the estrous cycle (n = 4 corpora lutea each) was superfused for 9 h, and the progesterone secretion under the influence of 100 ng luteinizing hormone (LH)/ml and/or 1,000 ng prostaglandin F(2alpha) (PGF(2alpha))/ml was determined. In vivo, this period of the estrous cycle is characterized by a transition from PGF(2alpha) refractoriness to PGF(2alpha) sensitivity. The investigations were carried out in order to examine whether this transition is reflected by a change in the hormone secretion pattern in vitro. The basal secretion was higher on Day 6 than on Day 4 and 5 (P < 0.01). PGF(2alpha) slightly increased the progesterone secretion, but there was no statistically significant difference (P > 0.05). LH, however, stimulated the progesterone secretion by about 30% in luteal tissue collected from Day 4 and 5 (P < 0.01). In luteal tissue collected from Day 6, the LH-induced increase in hormone secretion was not statistically significant due to two corpora lutea that showed no response at all to LH. The progesterone secretion of the two other corpora lutea, however, was increased by 30% (P < 0.01). When PGF(2alpha) and LH were simultaneously added, the LH-induced progesterone secretion was not inhibited; PGF(2alpha) even seemed to intensify the action of LH. The difference between the hormone secretion under the influence of LH alone and that under the influence of a combination of LH and PGF(2alpha), however, was not statistically significant. It is concluded that in cattle the end of the refractoriness to PGF(2alpha) in vivo is not reflected by a corresponding change of the hormone secretion pattern in vitro.  相似文献   

9.
Hamster granulosa cells were exposed to epidermal growth factor (EGF) and luteinizing hormone (LH) to study cross-talk between second messenger pathways involving tyrosine kinase, cAMP, and phosphoinositides. Granulosa cells from ovarian preovulatory follicles of PMSG-primed hamsters were incubated with various additives in serum-free medium. LH, but not EGF, stimulated inositol phosphate (IP) accumulation; however, when combined with LH, EGF inhibited IP accumulation in a manner that was concentration dependent for both LH and EGF. The inhibitory effects of EGF were significantly reduced by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein and by pertussis toxin suggesting a role for tyrosine kinase and an inhibitory G-protein (Gi) in this system. EGF stimulated an increase in cAMP, but it does not appear to modulate LH-stimulated IP levels via cAMP. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
We studied the effects of calcium (Ca2+) ions in progesterone (P) production by separated small and large luteal cells. Corpora lutea were collected from 31 heifers between days 10 and 12 of the estrous cycle. Purified small and large cells were obtained by unit gravity sedimentation and flow cytometry. P accumulation in cells plus media was determined after incubating 1 x 10(5) small and 5 x 10(3) large cells for 2 and 4 h respectively. Removal of Ca2+ from the medium did not influence basal P production in the small cells (P greater than 0.05). However, stimulation of P by luteinizing hormone (LH), prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), 8-bromo-cyclic 3',5' adenosine monophosphate (8-Br-cAMP) and prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) was impaired (P less than 0.05) by low Ca2+ concentrations. LH and PGE2-stimulated cAMP production was not altered by low extracellular Ca2+ concentrations, and PGF2 alpha had no effect on cAMP. In contrast, basal as well as LH and forskolin-stimulated P production were attenuated (P less than 0.05) in Ca2(+)-deficient medium in the large cells. However, P production stimulated by 8-Br-cAMP was not altered in Ca2(+)-deficient medium. Steroidogenesis in large cells was also dependent on intracellular Ca2+, since 8-N, N-diethylamineocytyl-3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate (TMB-8), an inhibitor of intracellular Ca2+ release and/or action, suppressed (P less than 0.05) basal, LH and 8-Br-cAMP stimulated P. In contrast, basal P in small cells was not altered by TMB-8; whereas LH-stimulated P was reduced 2-fold (P less than 0.05). The calcium ionophore, A23187, inhibited LH-stimulated P in small cells and both basal and agonist-stimulated P in large cells. These studies show that basal P production in small cells does not require Ca2+ ions, while hormone-stimulated P production in small cells and both basal and hormone-stimulated P in large cells do require Ca2+. The inhibitory effect of Ca2+ ion removal was exerted prior to the generation of cAMP in the large cells, but distal to cAMP generation in hormone-stimulated small cells. The calmodulin/protein kinase C antagonist, W-7, also inhibited both basal and hormone-stimulated P production in both small and large luteal cells, indicating that P production in luteal cells also involves Ca2(+)-calmodulin/protein kinase C-dependent mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
Accumulation of inositol phosphates by granulosa cells from medium follicles of porcine ovaries was studied to determine if hydrolysis of phosphoinositides is stimulated by luteinizing hormone (LH). Although follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), D-alanine-gonadotropin-releasing hormone (D-ala-GnRH), and dibutyryl cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (dbcAMP) had no effect, LH increased accumulation of inositol phosphate (IP), -bisphosphate (IP2), and trisphosphate (IP3) by severalfold. Furthermore, 0.01 microgram LH/ml increased IP3 accumulation threefold, while 0.1 microgram/ml stimulated accumulation of all inositol phosphates. Compared to untreated cells, LH-treated granulosa cells produced approximately twice as much progesterone in 30 min. Preincubation of cells with lithium chloride (LiCl) was necessary to measure IP accumulation, but not IP2 and IP3 accumulations. However, IP2 and IP3 accumulations were higher in LH-treated granulosa after pretreatment with LiCl. Maximal increases in IP3 and IP2 accumulations occurred approximately 15 min and 30 min, respectively, after LH stimulation, whereas the effect of LH on IP accumulation continued for at least 60 min. Granulosa, made permeable to IP3 with saponin treatment, did not hydrolyze [3H]IP3 to [3H]IP2 or [3H]IP. Thus, it is hypothesized that LH stimulates phosphoinositide hydrolysis in granulosa cells, thereby generating putative second messengers.  相似文献   

12.
Changes in levels of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), prostaglandin F (PGF), progesterone, testosterone, and estradiol-17beta, in preovulatory rat ovaries induced by exogenous luteinizing hormone (LH) have been measured. Ovarian cAMP reached maximal levels 15 min and 1h after LH administration by intravenous and intraperitoneal routes, respectively, and then declined to pre-LH levels by 8 h. Progesterone levels in ovaries and serum rose approximately in parallel with cAMP, but remained elevated throughout the 8-h sampling period. Ovarian testosterone increased to maximal levels 1 h after LH injection, followed by a rapid decline to below pre-LH levels. Ovarian estradiol-17beat concentrations declined steadily throughout the sampling period, reaching almost undetectable levels 8 h after LH treatment. Elevated ovarian PGF levels were observed only at the 4- and 8-h sampling times. Indomethacin treatment, 1 h before LH, prevented the LH-induced increase in ovarian PGF levels, depressed PGF values considerably in saline-injected controls but produced no significant inhibition of ovarian cAMP and progesterone levels. Aminoglutethimide phosphate depressed ovarian concentrations of all three steroids (progesterone, testosterone, and estradiol-17beta) to essentially undetectable levels, both in control and LH-injected rats, but did not alter the LH-induced changes in ovarian cAMP and PGF levels. These observations support the concept of cAMP as a mediator of the LH-induced alterations of ovarian steroidogenesis in vivo during the preovulatory period, but argue against an obligatory role of PGF in this process.  相似文献   

13.
This study was designed to examine the antisteroidogenic action of prostaglandin (PG) F2 alpha on ovine luteal cells in vitro. Purified populations of large and small steroidogenic luteal cells were treated with lipoproteins, luteinizing hormone (LH), and/or PGF2 alpha. To investigate the involvement of the protein kinase C (PKC) pathway in hormone action, luteal cells were made PKC-deficient by treatment for 12 h with 1 microM phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate. Progesterone production by nonstimulated large and LH-stimulated small luteal cells was significantly increased by treatment with high- and low-density lipoprotein (HDL, 5-fold increase; LDL, 2-fold increase). PGF2 alpha inhibited (p less than 0.0001) progesterone production by HDL-stimulated large luteal cells in a dose-dependent manner, with 60 nM causing maximal inhibition. No effect of PGF2 alpha (20nM-20 microM) was found on production of progesterone by HDL-stimulated, PKC-deficient large cells or by LH- and HDL-stimulated small luteal cells. These results suggest that PGF2 alpha has a direct antisteroidogenic effect on the large luteal cell that is mediated through the PKC second messenger pathway.  相似文献   

14.
Histone H2A competitively inhibits binding of GnRH to high affinity rat ovarian receptor sites and blocks gonadotropin-stimulated steroid and cAMP accumulation during culture of rat granulosal or luteal cells. The objective of our study was to examine the progesterone suppressive effects of histone H2A on bovine luteal cells. In the first study, luteal cells were treated at Time = 0 h with a partially purified preparation of bovine ovarian histone H2A (3 ng GnRH equivalents, 800 micrograms protein), equivalent amounts of GnRH (3 ng), or BSA (800 micrograms) and incubated for a total of 4 h. At Time = 2 h, cells were treated with 5 ng bovine LH (bLH) or with medium. Histone H2A completely blocked both basal and LH-induced accumulation of progesterone compared with untreated cultures or cultures treated with bLH. Neither BSA nor GnRH suppressed LH-induced progesterone accumulation. In the second study, histone H2A was added to cultures at Time = 0 h and bovine luteal cells were cultured for 8 h. After 2 h of treatment, histone H2A (3 ng GnRH equivalents) was removed from selected cultures and replaced with fresh medium. Four hours later cultures were treated with 5 ng bLH or medium. LH treatment of cultures from which histone H2A had been removed resulted in an increase in accumulation of progesterone compared with control cultures treated throughout the treatment period with histone H2A. The third study examined the effect of 9-181 pg GnRH equivalents (1.7-34 micrograms protein) of a highly purified preparation of bovine ovarian histone H2A on basal and LH-induced progesterone production during 2 or 3 h of culture.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Release of progesterone from enzymatically dispersed luteal cells of superovulated rats was studied using a multi-channeled perifusion system. Cells were perifused with protein-free medium for up to 5 h. Basal release of progesterone showed a steady decline during the first h of perifusion to a stable baseline where it remained throughout the experiment. A 30-min exposure of the luteal cells to increasing amounts of luteinizing hormone (LH) stimulated a dose-dependent increase in progesterone release. Similar results were observed when luteal cells were exposed to 0.2 or 1.0 mM dibutyryl (Bu)2 cAMP for 30 min. Exposure of the cells to 0, 1, 10, and 100 ng LH/ml protein-free medium for 230 min showed increased release of progesterone, although the dispersed cells perifused with 100 ng LH/ml protein-free medium were unable to maintain the maximal levels of progesterone release. The effect of bovine serum albumin (BSA) in the perifusion medium on the basal and LH-stimulated progesterone release was examined. Low concentrations of BSA (0.05%) had no effect, but 0.5% and 2.0% BSA significantly increased the basal release of progesterone. However, the addition of 0.05% BSA to the medium resulted in an increased progesterone release in response to 10 ng LH/ml medium. These results suggest that the in vitro perifusion system maintains physiologically viable cells which are responsive to either LH or (Bu)2 cAMP for at least 5 h. The effect of protein in the perifusion medium or progesterone release was demonstrated by the addition of BSA.  相似文献   

16.
The action of prostaglandin F2 alpha (PG F2 alpha) on incubated small bovine luteal cells in the presence or in the absence of bovine luteinizing hormone (LH) or dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (db cAMP) was investigated. In the absence of LH and db cAMP, PG F2 alpha stimulated progesterone synthesis at concentrations of 10 ng/ml and 100 ng/ml but had no effects at concentrations below 1 ng/ml. PG F2 alpha partially inhibited the LH or db cAMP stimulated progesterone synthesis. This inhibition was maximal for PG F2 alpha concentrations around 100 pg/ml whereas distinctly higher or lower concentrations were without effect. At the concentration of 100 pg/ml, PG F2 alpha partially inhibited the LH induced cAMP accumulation. These results demonstrate an "in vitro" action of PG F2 alpha on bovine luteal cells. They indicate that the luteolytic action of PG F2 alpha in the bovine species could involve, as already suggested for the rat, both an inhibition of the LH induced synthesis of cAMP and an inhibition of the action of cAMP.  相似文献   

17.
Follicular fluid from large follicles of cows was extracted with charcoal and filtered through an Amicon XM-50 membrane. The XM-50 filtrate was further fractionated on a column of Fractogel TSK HW-40 (s) using Krebs-Ringer-phosphate buffer (1/100th dilution), pH 7.2, as an eluant. Two fractions (1 and 2) were obtained. Inhibition of progesterone secretion by small luteal cells was associated with the XM-50 filtrate and Fraction 2. Whole follicular fluid, the XM-50 retentate and Fraction 1 had no significant inhibitory activity. Fraction 2, which contained about 1/100,000th of the original follicular fluid proteins, inhibited the LH- or (Bu)2cAMP-induced progesterone production during a 2-h incubation. This inhibition was dose-dependent. Fraction 2 also inhibited LH-induced cAMP accumulation, but did not affect the conversion of pregnenolone to progesterone or the basal progesterone production. The molecular weight of the inhibitory factor was estimated to be less than 10,000 and its ability to inhibit steroidogenesis was lost after digestion with protease but retained after heating for 60 min at 75 degrees C. These results demonstrate that bovine follicular fluid contains a heat-stable factor likely to be a polypeptide and which suppresses the steroidogenic response of small luteal cells to LH. The action of this inhibitory factor could involve both an inhibition of the LH-induced synthesis of cAMP and an inhibition of the action of cAMP.  相似文献   

18.
A single-cell approach for measuring the concentration of cytoplasmic calcium ions ([Ca(2+)](i)) and a protein kinase C-epsilon (PKCepsilon)-specific inhibitor were used to investigate the developmental role of PKCepsilon in the prostaglandin F(2alpha)(PGF(2alpha))-induced rise in [Ca(2+)](i) and the induced decline in progesterone accumulation in cultures of cells isolated from the bovine corpus luteum. PGF(2alpha) increased [Ca(2+)](i) in Day 4 large luteal cells (LLCs), but the response was significantly lower than in Day 10 LLCs (4.3 +/- 0.6, n = 116 vs. 21.3 +/- 2.3, n = 110). Similarly, the fold increase in the PGF(2alpha)-induced rise in [Ca(2+)](i) in Day 4 small luteal cells (SLCs) was lower than in Day 10 SLCs (1.6 +/- 0.2, n = 198 vs. 2.7 +/- 0.1, n = 95). A PKCepsilon inhibitor reduced the PGF(2alpha)-elicited calcium responses in both Day 10 LLCs and SLCs to 3.5 +/- 0.3 (n = 217) and 1.3 +/- 0.1 (n = 205), respectively. PGF(2alpha) inhibited LH-stimulated progesterone (P(4)) accumulation only in the incubation medium of Day 10 luteal cells. Both conventional and PKCepsilon-specific inhibitors reversed the ability of PGF(2alpha) to decrease LH-stimulated P(4) accumulation, and the PKCepsilon inhibitor was more effective at this than the conventional PKC inhibitor. In conclusion, the evidence indicates that PKCepsilon, an isozyme expressed in corpora lutea with acquired PGF(2alpha) luteolytic capacity, has a regulatory role in the PGF(2alpha)-induced Ca(2+) signaling in luteal steroidogenic cells, and that this in turn may have consequences (at least in part) on the ability of PGF(2alpha) to inhibit LH-stimulated P(4) synthesis at this developmental stage.  相似文献   

19.
The ability of de novo biosynthesis of prostaglandins (PGs) in individual whole corpora lutea (CL) obtained from sterile-mated adult pseudopregnant rats on different days of the luteal phase and the post-luteolytic period was evaluated. Production of PGs, progesterone and 20 alpha-dihydroprogesterone were determined after in vitro incubation of CL extirpated from Day 2 to Day 19 after mating. A time-relationship with increased accumulation of PGs in the medium was demonstrated from 18 s to 5 h, with large increments during the first 30 min. Basal accumulation of PGs in the incubation medium was highest for 6-keto-PGF1 alpha (the stable metabolite of prostacyclin) greater than PGE2 greater than PGF2 alpha greater than thromboxane B2 (TXB2) and basal accumulation of PGF2 alpha and PGE2 measured in the medium was maximal on Day 10-11 of pseudopregnancy, concomitantly with a decline in secretion of progesterone. Addition of arachidonic acid (AA) dose-dependently increased synthesis of PGs, with absolute amounts of PGE2 greater than 6-keto-PGF1 alpha greater than PGF2 alpha greater than TXB2 and addition of 14 microM indomethacin markedly inhibited accumulation of all PGs measured. Luteinizing hormone (LH, 10 micrograms/ml) stimulated progesterone secretion on all days during pseudopregnancy, but not on the post-luteolytic Day 19. LH increased PGF2 alpha, PGE2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha secretion on Day 13 of pseudopregnancy by 76%, 91% and 28%, respectively, but not on the other days tested. Furthermore, stimulation of PG-synthesis by addition of AA abrogated the LH-induced progesterone accumulation markedly, but only on Day 13 of pseudopregnancy. Epinephrine (5 micrograms/ml) increased production of progesterone and also PGs, but only on Day 2 of pseudopregnancy, whereas oxytocin (100 mIU/ml) was found to be without effect on progesterone as well as PG secretion on all days tested. The results of the present study demonstrates the independent ability of the rat CL to synthesize PGG/PGH2-derived prostaglandins, including the putative luteolysin PGF2 alpha. Secondly, we demonstrate that LH and AA-induced increases in PGF2 alpha and PGE2 production during the luteolytic period, may be an autocrine or paracrine mechanism involved in luteolysis.  相似文献   

20.
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