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1.
The aim of this study was to elucidate the mechanism(s) involved in stress-induced subfertility by examining the effect of 4 h transport on surge and pulsatile LH secretion in intact ewes and ovariectomized ewes treated with steroids to induce an artificial follicular phase (model ewes). Transport caused a greater delay in the onset of the LH surge in nine intact ewes than it did in ten ovariectomized ewes (intact: 41.0 +/- 0.9 h versus 48.3 +/- 0.8 h, P < 0.02; ovariectomized model: 40.8 +/- 0.6 h versus 42.6 +/- 0.5 h, P < 0.02). Disruption of the hypothalamus-pituitary endocrine balance in intact ewes may have reduced gonadotrophin stimulation of follicular oestradiol production which had an additional effect on the LH surge mechanism. In the ovariectomized model ewes, this effect was masked by the exogenous supply of oestradiol. However, in these model ewes, there was a greater suppression of maximum LH surge concentrations (intact controls: 29 +/- 4 ng ml-1 versus intact transported 22 +/- 5 ng ml-1, P < 0.02; ovariectomized model controls: 35 +/- 7 ng ml-1 versus model transported 15 +/- 2 ng ml-1, P < 0.02). Subsequent exposure to progesterone for 12 days resulted in the resumption of a normal LH profile in the next follicular phase, indicating that acute stress leads to a temporary endocrine lesion. In four intact ewes transported in the mid-follicular phase, there was a suppression of LH pulse amplitude (0.9 +/- 0.3 versus 0.3 +/- 0.02 ng ml-1, P < 0.05) but a statistically significant effect on pulse frequency was not observed (2.0 +/- 0.4 versus 1.7 +/- 0.6 pulses per 2 h). In conclusion, activation of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis by transport in the follicular phase of intact ewes interrupts surge secretion of LH, possibly by interference with LH pulsatility and, hence, follicular oestradiol production. This disruption of gonadotrophin secretion will have a major impact on fertility.  相似文献   

2.
Fifteen ovariectomized ewes were treated with implants (s.c.) creating circulating luteal progesterone concentrations of 1.6 +/- 0.1 ng ml-1 serum. Ten days later, progesterone implants were removed from five ewes which were then infused with saline for 64 h (0.154 mol NaCl l-1, 20 ml h-1, i.v.). Ewes with progesterone implants remaining were infused with saline (n = 5) or naloxone (0.5 mg kg-1 h-1, n = 5) in saline for 64 h. At 36 h of infusion, all ewes were injected with oestradiol (20 micrograms in 1 ml groundnut oil, i.m.). During the first 36 h of infusion, serum luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations were similar in ewes infused with saline after progesterone withdrawal and ewes infused with naloxone, but with progesterone implants remaining (1.23 +/- 0.11 and 1.28 +/- 0.23 ng ml-1 serum, respectively, mean +/- SEM, P greater than 0.05). These values exceeded circulating LH concentrations during the first 36 h of saline infusion of ewes with progesterone implants remaining (0.59 +/- 0.09 ng ml-1 serum, P less than 0.05). The data suggested that progesterone suppression of tonic LH secretion, before oestradiol injection, was completely antagonized by naloxone. After oestradiol injection, circulating LH concentrations decreased for about 10 h in ewes of all groups. A surge in circulating LH concentrations peaked 24 h after oestradiol injection in ewes infused with saline after progesterone withdrawal (8.16 +/- 3.18 ng LH ml-1 serum).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Changes in the secretion of LH during the oestrous cycle were studied in 5 tame Père David's deer in which ovulation was synchronized with progesterone implants and prostaglandin injections. Plasma LH concentrations were measured in samples collected at 15-min intervals for a 36-h period, starting 16 h after the removal of the progesterone implants (follicular phase), and for a further 10-h period 10 days after the removal of the progesterone implants (luteal phase). In all animals, there was a preovulatory surge of LH and behavioural oestrus which occurred at a mean time of 59.6 h (+/- 3.25) and 69 h respectively following implant removal. LH pulse frequency was significantly higher during the follicular phase (0.59 +/- 0.03 pulses/h) than the luteal phase (0.24 +/- 0.2 pulses/h), thus confirming in deer findings from research on domesticated ruminants. There were no significant differences between the follicular and luteal phases in mean plasma LH concentrations (0.57 +/- 0.09 and 0.74 +/- 0.13 ng/ml) or mean pulse amplitude (0.99 +/- 0.14 and 1.05 +/- 0.21 ng/ml) for the follicular and luteal phase respectively. The long interval from the removal of progesterone to the onset of the LH surge and the absence of a significant difference in mean LH concentration or pulse amplitude in the follicular and luteal phases resemble published data for cattle but differ from sheep in which there is a short interval from luteal regression to the onset of the surge and a marked increase in LH pulse amplitude during the luteal phase.  相似文献   

4.
Concentration of plasma luteinizing hormone (LH) and oestradiol concentrations and responses to a standard challenge with a gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogue were measured at certain stages of anoestrus during consecutive cycles in five beagle bitches. Blood samples were collected every 20 min for 6h followed immediately by injection of GnRH analogue (0.16 micrograms i.v.) and collection of further samples after 10, 20, 40 and 60 min. Five, 10, 17 and three such sampling sequences were obtained during the luteal phase, transition to anoestrus, anoestrus and pro-oestrus respectively (i.e. 154-71, 114-44, 85-11 and 7-1 days before the preovulatory LH peak, respectively). Pulsatile LH secretion occurred spontaneously at all stages of the luteal phase and anoestrus and there was no effect of cycle stage on mean LH concentration or variability. In contrast, oestradiol could not be detected in most samples from early and mid-anoestrus until approximately one month before the preovulatory LH peak, after which average oestradiol concentration and between sample variability appeared to increase. Mean (+/- SEM) oestradiol concentration for all samples collected from 100-75, 74-50, 49-25, 24-10 and 9-1 days before LH peak was 1.4 +/- 0.1, 1.3 +/- 0.1, 2.4 +/- 0.3, 11.0 +/- 1.4 and 36.0 +/- 3.2 pg ml-1, respectively. Plasma LH concentration increased in all bitches after GnRH analogue injection (2.7 +/- 0.7 ng ml-1 at t = 0, 12.5 +/- 1.0 ng ml-1 at t = 10 min, mean +/- SEM, n = 35) regardless of cycle stage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
During 12 sampling days before ovariectomy the mean plasma FSH but not LH concentrations in FF ewes were higher (P less than 0.01) than those in ++ ewes (16 ewes/genotype). After ovariectomy increases in the concentrations of FSH and LH were noted for ewes of both genotypes within 3-4 h and the rates of increase of FSH and LH were 0.18 ng ml-1 h-1 and 0.09 ng ml-1 h-1 respectively for the first 15 h. From Days 1 to 12 after ovariectomy, the overall mean +/- s.e.m. concentrations for FSH in the FF and ++ ewes were 8.1 +/- 0.6 and 7.1 +/- 0.4 ng/ml respectively and for LH they were 2.7 +/- 0.3 and 2.1 +/- 0.2 ng/ml: these differences were not statistically significant (P = 0.09 for both FSH and LH; Student's t test). However, when the frequencies of high FSH or LH values after ovariectomy were compared with respect to genotype over time, significant F gene-specific differences were noted (P less than 0.01 for both FSH and LH; median test). In Exp. 2 another 21 ewes/genotype were blood sampled every 2nd day from Days 2 to 60 after ovariectomy and the plasma concentrations of FSH and LH were more frequently higher in FF than in ++ ewes (P less than 0.01 for FSH and LH). The F gene-specific differences in LH concentration, observed at 21-36 days after ovariectomy were due to higher mean LH amplitudes (P less than 0.025) but not LH peak frequency in FF than in ++ ewes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Corpora lutea and follicles were taken from the ovaries of 12 ewes at intervals from the start of luteolysis until 3 days after ovulation. RIA analysis of the tissue oxytocin content showed that luteal oxytocin concentrations declined during luteolysis to reach basal values at about the time of the next ovulation. Oxytocin was first measurable in the walls of 3 out of 6 preovulatory follicles during the LH surge, with a small increase in concentration to 26.1 +/- 6.6 pg/mg before ovulation, and a further increase in the young corpus luteum to concentrations exceeding 1 ng/mg 2-3 days later. After the LH surge, oxytocin was also found in the follicular fluid at a concentration of 3.4 +/- 0.3 ng/ml. Using immunocytochemical techniques, oxytocin and neurophysin were first detected in the follicle wall immediately before ovulation, and were localized in the granulosa cells. After ovulation the stained cells initially formed strands which appeared to break down to clusters and then to individual cells as the corpus luteum matured. The immunocytochemical picture also suggested that neurophysin immunoreactivity increased within a few hours of ovulation but that processing to oxytocin may be delayed. Measurements of circulating oxytocin concentrations revealed a pulsatile release pattern throughout the follicular phase with the height of the pulses decreasing from 25 +/- 5 pg/ml during luteolysis to a minimum of 11 +/- 2 pg/ml during the LH surge.  相似文献   

7.
Stress-like concentrations of cortisol increase the negative feedback potency of oestradiol in castrated male sheep. A similar cortisol-dependent response in female sheep might be expected to suppress gonadotrophin secretion and impair follicular development and ovulation. The oestrous activity of 21 female sheep was synchronized using progestogen-treated vaginal pessaries to test this hypothesis. Stress-like concentrations of cortisol (60-70 ng ml-1) were established by continuous infusion of cortisol (80 micrograms kg-1 h-1; n = 13) beginning 5 days before, and continuing for 5 days after, pessary removal. Control animals (n = 8) received a comparable volume of vehicle (50% ethanol-saline) over the 10 day infusion period. Serum concentrations of oestradiol increased progressively in control sheep during the 48 h immediately after pessary removal. This increase in serum oestradiol was blocked or significantly attenuated in sheep receiving stress-like concentrations of cortisol. Preovulatory surge-like secretion of LH was apparent in control animals 58.5 +/- 2.1 h after pessary removal. In contrast, surge-like secretion of LH was not observed during the 5 days after pessary removal in 54% (7 of 13) of sheep receiving cortisol. Moreover, the onset of the surge was significantly delayed in the cortisol-treated ewes that showed surge-like secretion of LH during the infusion period. The ability of episodic pulses of exogenous GnRH to override the anti-gonadal effect of cortisol was examined in a second study. Oestrous activity of 12 ewes was synchronized using progestogen-containing pessaries as described above. Ewes were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups (n = 4 ewes per group). Animals received cortisol (100 micrograms kg-1 h-1; groups 1 and 2) or a comparable volume of vehicle (group 3) beginning 5 days before, and continuing for 2 days after, pessary removal. Pulses of GnRH (4 ng kg-1 h-1, i.v.; group 1) or saline (groups 2 and 3) at 1 h intervals were initiated at pessary removal and continued for 48 h. Serum concentrations of oestradiol were not significantly increased after pessary removal in sheep receiving cortisol alone. Conversely, serum concentrations of oestradiol increased progressively during the 48 h after pessary removal in control ewes and in ewes receiving cortisol and GnRH. At the end of infusion, serum concentrations of oestradiol did not differ (P > 0.05) between control (7.7 +/- 0.8 pg ml-1) ewes and ewes receiving cortisol and episodic GnRH (6.4 +/- 1.3 pg ml-1). Moreover, these values were significantly greater (P < 0.05) than the serum concentrations of oestradiol in animals receiving cortisol (1.0 +/- 0.4 pg ml-1) alone. Collectively, these data indicate stress-like concentrations of cortisol block or delay follicular development and the preovulatory surge of LH in sheep. In addition, episodic GnRH overrides cortisol-induced delay in follicular maturation.  相似文献   

8.
The specific requirement for FSH in the final stages of preovulatory follicle development was assessed in seasonally anoestrous ewes given 2-h injections of GnRH (250 ng/injection), with (N = 10) or without (N = 10) concurrent treatment with bovine follicular fluid (bFF: 2 ml given i.v. at 8-h intervals). Treatment with bFF significantly (P less than 0.01) suppressed plasma FSH concentrations, but, at least for the first 30 h of treatment, did not influence the magnitude of GnRH-induced LH episodes (mean max. conc. 3.00 +/- 0.39 and 3.63 +/- 0.51 ng/ml for bFF-treated and control ewes, respectively). Of 10 animals treated with GnRH for 72 h, 5/5 control ewes showed oestrus and ovulated whereas 0/5 bFF-treated ewes showed oestrus or ovulated in response to GnRH treatment. There was, however, a transient (13.2 +/- 1.0 h) increase in plasma LH concentrations in the ewes given bFF (mean max. conc. 4.64 +/- 1.57 ng/ml), which was coincident with the preovulatory LH surge recorded in animals given GnRH alone. In 10 GnRH-treated ewes slaughtered after 32 h of treatment, the mean diameter of the largest antral follicle was significantly (P less than 0.001) greater in control ewes (5.92 +/- 0.17 mm) than in animals that were also given bFF (3.94 +/- 0.14 mm). In addition, the incidence of atresia in the 3 largest antral follicles present at this time was greater in bFF-treated ewes. These results show that, when plasma FSH concentrations are suppressed by administration of bFF, although the magnitude of GnRH-induced LH episodes is unchanged, preovulatory follicular development is impaired and ovulation does not occur.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Stress-like levels of cortisol suppress follicular growth and development and block or delay the preovulatory surge of LH when cortisol is continuously administered during the late luteal and early follicular phases of the ovine oestrous cycle. We postulated that cortisol infusion of shorter duration would have a similar effect. To test this hypothesis the oestrous cycles of mature ewes were synchronized using progestin-treated vaginal pessaries. Ewes were randomly assigned to one of four treatment groups. Animals received cortisol (0.1mg/kg/h; n=8) or vehicle alone (n=8) beginning 5 days before, and continuing for 5 days after, pessary removal (PR). Additional groups received cortisol only during the 5 days period before (n=7), or the 5 days period after (n=8), PR. Continuous delivery of cortisol established stable serum concentrations of cortisol of 72.0+/-2.5ng/ml within 6h of initiation of infusion. Serum concentrations of oestradiol increased progressively during the period after PR in control animals receiving vehicle alone and the preovulatory surge of LH was evident in all control animals (eight of eight) 55.5+/-5.0h after PR. In contrast, follicular development and the preovulatory surge of LH were evident during the period of cortisol infusion in only one of eight animals receiving stress-like levels of cortisol over the entire 10-day infusion period. Similarly, neither follicular development nor surge-like secretion of LH were evident during the infusion period in animals (zero of eight) receiving cortisol during the 5-day period after PR. This cortisol-dependent suppression of ovarian activity in sheep receiving stress-like levels of cortisol during the 5 days after PR was temporary and follicular development, the ovulatory surge of LH, and subsequent luteal function were evident in six of eight ewes after cessation of cortisol delivery. Similarly, follicular development and the preovulatory surge of LH were noted within 5 days after PR in four of seven ewes receiving cortisol only during the 5-day period prior to PR. Collectively, these data indicate that stress-like levels of cortisol reduce fertility of sheep by suppressing follicular development and the preovulatory surge of LH. Additionally, cortisol delivery during the follicular phase has a more profound suppressive effect on follicular development than cortisol administration during the luteal phase.  相似文献   

10.
Plasma concentrations of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) were determined 3-6 times daily in six Beagle bitches from the start of the follicular phase until 5 d after the estimated day of ovulation. The aim of the study was to gain more detailed information regarding the changes in and the temporal relation between these hormones around the time of ovulation. In all bitches, the pre-ovulatory LH surge was accompanied by a pre-ovulatory FSH surge. The mean duration of the pre-ovulatory FSH surge (110 +/- 8 h) was significantly longer than that of the pre-ovulatory LH surge (36 +/- 5 h). The FSH surge started concomitantly with the pre-ovulatory LH surge in four bitches, and 12 h before the start of the LH surge in the other two bitches. The pre-ovulatory LH surge had a bifurcated pattern in four bitches. The mean plasma LH concentration before (1.9 +/- 0.4 microg/L) and after (1.9 +/- 0.3 microg/L) the pre-ovulatory LH surge were similar. The mean plasma FSH concentration during the period 72-28 h before the pre-ovulatory LH surge (1.6 +/- 0.3 U/L) was lower (P < 0.001) than that during the period 100-144 h after the pre-ovulatory LH surge (3.1 +/- 0.2U/L). In conclusion, this study demonstrated concurrent pre-ovulatory surges of FSH and LH and provided more evidence for differential regulation of the secretion of FSH and LH.  相似文献   

11.
This study was designed to see if giving exogenous oestradiol, during the follicular phase of the oestrous cycle of intact ewes, during the breeding season or transition into anoestrus, would alter the occurrence, timing or magnitude of the preovulatory surge of secretion of luteinising hormone (LH) or follicle stimulating hormone (FSH). During the breeding season and the time of transition, separate groups of ewes were infused (intravenously) with either saline (30 ml h−1; n = 6) or oestradiol in saline (n = 6) for 30 h. Infusion started 12 h after removal of progestin-containing intravaginal sponges that had been in place for 12 days. The initial dose of oestradiol was 0.02 μg h−1; this was doubled every 4 h for 20 h, followed by every 5 h up to 30 h, to reach a maximum of 1.5 μg h−1. Following progestin removal during the breeding season, peak serum concentrations of oestradiol in control ewes were 10.31 ± 1.04 pg ml−1, at 49.60 ± 3.40 h after progestin removal. There was no obvious peak during transition, but at a time after progestin removal equivalent to the time of the oestradiol peak in ewes at mid breeding season, oestradiol concentrations were 6.70 ± 1.14 pg ml−1 in ewes in transition (P < 0.05). In oestradiol treated ewes, peak serum oestradiol concentrations (24.8 ± 2.1 pg ml−1) and time to peak (41.00 ± 0.05 h) did not differ between seasons (P > 0.05). During the breeding season, all six control ewes and four of six ewes given oestradiol showed oestrus with LH and FSH surges. The two ewes not showing oestrus did not respond to oestrus synchronisation and had persistently high serum concentrations of progesterone. During transition, three of six control ewes showed oestrus but only two had LH and FSH surges; all oestradiol treated ewes showed oestrus and gonadotrophin surges (P < 0.05). The timing and magnitude of LH and FSH surges did not vary with treatment or season. In blood samples collected every 12 min for 6 h, from 12 h after the start of oestradiol infusion, mean serum concentrations of LH and LH pulse frequency were lower in control ewes during transition than during mid breeding season (P < 0.05). Oestradiol treatment resulted in lower mean serum concentrations of LH in season and lower LH pulse frequency in transition (P < 0.05). We concluded that enhancing the height of the preovulatory peak in serum concentrations of oestradiol during the breeding season did not alter the timing or the magnitude of the preovulatory surge of LH and FSH secretion and that at transition into anoestrus, oestradiol can induce oestrus and the surge release of LH and FSH as effectively as during the breeding season.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Plasma FSH concentrations were measured in Merino ewes immunized with either an inhibin-enriched preparation from bovine follicular fluid (bFFI) or bovine serum albumin. When compared during the normal oestrous cycle, ewes reimmunized three times with bFFI and which showed increased ovulation rates before the experiment had significantly elevated plasma FSH concentrations on Day 13–14 and at Day 2 of the subsequent cycle. There was a positive correlation (P < 0.05) between plasma FSH concentration and the ovulation rate of the ewes in previous cycles (during the period of immunization) and in the cycle under investigation. In a larger group of ewes immunized against bFFI, which showed a variable increase in ovulation rate, there was no comparable increase in plasma FSH concentration when compared with control ewes in the follicular phase of the cycle.By contrast, when luteolysis was induced by a prostaglandin analogue the bFFI-immunized ewes had lower plasma FSH concentrations than control ewes immediately before and after the preovulatory LH surge. This decrease was significant in the period 9–21 h after the LH surge (P < 0.05–0.01) so that the onset of the second FSH peak was delayed.When the ewes were ovariectomized, the post-castration rise in plasma FSH concentration (but not LH) was delayed for a period of 24 h in bFFI-immunized ewes relative to controls.These experiments show that immunization of ewes with an inhibin-like fraction of bFF does not lead to consistently elevated plasma FSH. However, such ewes have altered feedback regulation leading to differential responses of FSH to prostaglandin-induced luteolysis and to castration.  相似文献   

14.
The concentrations of six steroids and of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) were measured in follicular fluid from preovulatory and large atretic follicles of normal Holstein heifers and from preovulatory follicles of heifers treated with a hormonal regimen that induces superovulation. Follicular fluid from preovulatory follicles of normal animals obtained prior to the LH surge contained extremely high concentrations of estradiol (1.1 +/- 0.06 micrograms/ml), with estrone concentrations about 20-fold less. Androstenedione was the predominant aromatizable androgen (278 +/- 44 ng/ml; testosterone = 150 +/- 39 ng/ml). Pregnenolone (40 +/- 3 ng/ml) was consistently higher than progesterone (25 +/- 3 ng/ml). In fluid obtained at 15 and 24 h after the onset of estrus, estradiol concentrations had declined 6- and 12-fold, respectively; androgen concentrations had decreased 10- to 20-fold; and progesterone concentrations were increased, whereas pregnenolone concentrations had declined. Concentrations of LH and FSH in these follicles were similar to plasma levels of these hormones before and after the gonadotropin surges. The most striking difference between mean steroid levels in large atretic follicles (greater than 1 cm in diameter) and preovulatory follicles obtained before the LH surge was that estradiol concentrations were about 150 times lower in atretic follicles. Atretic follicles also had much lower concentrations of LH and slightly lower concentrations of FSH than preovulatory follicles. Hormone concentrations in follicles obtained at 12 h after the onset of estrus from heifers primed for superovulation were similar to those observed in normal preovulatory follicles at estrus + 15 h, except that estrogen concentrations were about 6-40 times lower and there was more variability among animals for both steroid and gonadotropin concentrations. Variability in the concentrations of reproductive hormones in fluid from heifers primed for superovulation suggests that the variations in numbers of normal embryos obtained with this treatment may be due, at least in part, to abnormal follicular steroidogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
Two experiments using Spanish Merino ewes were conducted to investigate whether the secretion of prolactin during the follicular phase of the sheep oestrous cycle was involved in the patterns of growth and regression of follicle populations. In both experiments, oestrus was synchronized with two cloprostenol injections which were administered 10 days apart. Concurrent with the second injection (time 0), ewes (n = 6 per group) received one of the following treatments every 12 h from time 0 to 72 h: group 1: vehicle injection (control); group 2: 0.6 mg bromocriptine (0.03 mg per kg per day); and group 3: 1.2 mg bromocriptine (0.06 mg per kg per day). In Expt 1, blood samples were collected every 3 h from 0 to 72 h, and also every 20 min from 38 to 54 h to measure prolactin, LH and FSH concentrations. In Expt 2, transrectal ultrasonography was carried out every 12 h from time 0 until oestrus, and blood samples were collected every 4 h to measure prolactin, LH and FSH concentrations. Ovulation rates were determined by laparoscopy on day 4 after oestrus. Bromocriptine markedly decreased prolactin secretion, but did not affect FSH concentrations, the mean time of the LH preovulatory surge or LH concentrations in the preovulatory surge. Both doses of bromocriptine caused a similar decrease in LH pulse frequency before the preovulatory surge. The highest bromocriptine dose led to a reduction (P < 0.01) in the number of 2-3 mm follicles detected in the ovaries at each time point. However, bromocriptine did not modify the total number or the number of newly detected 4-5 mm follicles at each time point, the number of follicles > 5 mm or the ovulation rate. In conclusion, the effects of bromocriptine on gonadotrophin and prolactin secretion and on the follicular dynamics during the follicular phase of the sheep oestrous cycle indicate that prolactin may influence the viability of gonadotrophin-responsive follicles shortly after luteolysis.  相似文献   

16.
Serum gonadotropin concentrations were high and variable and fluctuated episodically in short and long term ovariectomized ewes. Treatment with solid silastic implants releasing progesterone (serum levels 1.81 +/- 0.16 ng/ml) had no consistent effect. Treatment with implants releasing estradiol-17beta significantly depressed mean serum gonadotropin concentrations and peak height to values usually seen in intact ewes. This occurred regardless of implant size and serum estradiol-17beta concentrations (range 11 +/- 0.3 pg/ml to 98 +/- 12.8 pg/ml). Progesterone and estradiol-17beta together significantly depressed the frequency of peaks in LH concentration. Following progesterone removal, 95% of the ewes treated with progesterone and estradiol-17beta implants experienced a transient increase in serum LH concentrations similar to the preovulatory surge in intact ewes. Eighty-four percent of the LH surges were accompanied by a surge in serum FSH concentrations. However, following progesterone removal, 5.1 +/- 2.1 FSH surges were observed over six days. Gonadotropin surges occurred regardless of estradiol-17beta implant size and with or without the influence of supplemental estradiol-17beta.  相似文献   

17.
Experiments were conducted with ewes to investigate the effects of an enriched bovine follicular fluid inhibin preparation (INH) on gonadotrophin secretion after the onset of oestrus. Administration of INH (10 mg) 1 h after the onset of oestrus did not significantly alter the preovulatory FSH and LH surges or the second FSH peak. To determine the effects of INH on the second FSH surge, ewes were treated with saline (N = 7) or INH (N = 10) at 4 h (10 mg) and 24 h (5 mg) after the peak of the preovulatory LH surge. The second FSH surge was delayed about 24 h (P less than 0.05) in ewes treated with INH; however, the delay did not alter the interval to the next oestrus. In a third experiment, 16 ewes were assigned to 4 groups in a 2 x 2 factorial with the main effects being ovariectomy at 4 h and INH treatment (10 mg) at 4, 20 and 36 h after the peak of the LH surge. Controls received sham ovariectomy and saline injection as appropriate. Ovariectomy resulted in a rapid increase in serum FSH but not LH and this was delayed (P less than 0.05) by INH treatment. These results indicate that inhibin has a selective inhibitory action on FSH secretion in ewes and suggests that the second FSH surge results from increased basal FSH secretion due to decreased endogenous inhibin levels.  相似文献   

18.
The objective of this study was to characterize follicular development, onset of oestrus and preovulatory LH surge, and in vivo embryo yields of sheep superovulated after treatment with a single dose of 1.5mg of GnRH antagonist (GnRHa). At first FSH dose, ewes treated with GnRH antagonist (n=12) showed a higher number of gonadotrophin-responsive follicles, 2-3mm, than control ewes (n=9, 13.5+/-3.8 versus 5.3+/-0.3, P<0.05). Administration of FSH increased the number of >or=4mm follicles at sponge removal in both groups (19.3+/-3.8, P<0.0005 for treated ewes and 12.7+/-5.4, P<0.01 for controls). Thereafter, a 25% of the GnRHa-treated sheep did not show oestrous behaviour whilst none control sheep failed (P=0.06). The preovulatory LH surge was detected in an 88.9% of control ewes and 66.7% of GnRHa-treated sheep. A 77.8% of control females showed ovulation with a mean of 9.6+/-0.9 CL and 3.3+/-0.7 viable embryos, while ewes treated with GnRHa and showing an LH surge exhibited a bimodal distribution of response; 50% showed no ovulatory response and 50% superovulated with a mean of 12.2+/-1.1 CL and 7.3+/-1.1 viable embryos. In conclusion, a single dose of GnRHa enhances the number of gonadotrophin-dependent follicles able to grow to preovulatory sizes in response to an FSH supply. However, LH secretion may be altered in some females, which can affect the preovulatory LH surge and/or can weak the terminal maturation of ovulatory follicles.  相似文献   

19.
Overall, significantly more antral follicles greater than or equal to 1 mm diameter were present in Romney ewes during anoestrus than in the breeding season (anoestrus, 35 +/- 3 (mean +/- s.e.m.) follicles per ewe, 23 sheep; Day 9-10 of oestrous cycle, 24 +/- 1 follicles per ewe, 22 sheep; P less than 0.01), although the mean numbers of preovulatory-sized follicles (greater than or equal to 5 mm diam.) were similar (anoestrus, 1.3 +/- 0.2 per ewe; oestrous cycle, 1.0 +/- 0.1 per ewe). The ability of ovarian follicles to synthesize oestradiol did not differ between anoestrus and the breeding season as assessed from the levels of extant aromatase enzyme activity in granulosa cells and steroid concentrations in follicular fluid. Although the mean plasma concentration of LH did not differ between anoestrus and the luteal phase of the breeding season, the pattern of LH secretion differed markedly; on Day 9-10 of the oestrous cycle there were significantly more (P less than 0.001) high-amplitude LH peaks (i.e. greater than or equal to 1 ng/ml) in plasma and significantly fewer (P less than 0.001) low amplitude peaks (less than 1 ng/ml) than in anoestrous ewes. Moreover, the mean concentrations of FSH and prolactin were significantly lower during the luteal phase of the cycle than during anoestrus (FSH, P less than 0.05, prolactin, P less than 0.001). It is concluded that, in Romney ewes, the levels of antral follicular activity change throughout the year in synchrony with the circannual patterns of prolactin and day-length. Also, these data support the notion that anovulation during seasonal anoestrus is due to a reduced frequency of high-amplitude LH discharges from the pituitary gland.  相似文献   

20.
Mature Merino ewes in which the left ovary and its vascular pedicle had been autotransplanted to the neck were divided into control (N = 5) and immunized groups (N = 6). The immunized ewes were treated (2 ml s.c.) with Fecundin 1 and 4 weeks before the start of blood sampling. Ovarian and jugular venous blood was collected every 10 min at two stages of the follicular phase (21-27 h and 38-42 h after i.m. injection of 125 micrograms of a prostaglandin (PG) analogue) and during the mid-luteal phase (8 h at 15-min intervals). The ewes were monitored regularly for luteal function and preovulatory LH surges. Hormone concentrations and anti-androstenedione titres were assayed by RIA and ovarian secretion rates of oestradiol-17 beta, progesterone and androstenedione were determined. After the booster immunization, progesterone increased simultaneously with titre in immunized ewes, reaching 30 ng/ml at the time of PG injection when median titre was 1:10,000. All ewes responded to PG with LH surges 42-72 h later: 2 of the immunized ewes then had a second LH surge within 3-4 days at a time when peripheral progesterone values were 2-3 ng/ml. The frequency of steroid and LH pulses was greater in immunized ewes (P less than 0.05) during the luteal phase but not the follicular phase. The secretion rate of androstenedione was 6-10 times greater (19-37 ng/min; P less than 0.001) in immunized ewes at all sampling stages. Progesterone secretion rates were 3 times greater (16 micrograms/min; P less than 0.001) during the luteal phase in immunized ewes. The amplitude of oestradiol pulses was significantly reduced in immunized ewes (4.8 vs 2.1 ng/min at +24 h and 6.5 vs 2.8 ng/min at +40 h in control and immunized ewes, respectively: P less than 0.05) during the follicular phase. However, the mean secretion rate of oestradiol at each phase of the cycle was not significantly different between treatment groups. Analysis of bound and free steroid using polyethylene glycol showed that greater than 98% of peripheral and ovarian venous androstenedione and 86% of peripheral progesterone was bound in immunized ewes but there was no appreciable binding (less than 0.1%) in control ewes. Similarly, 50% of ovarian venous oestradiol was bound in immunized ewes compared to 15% in control ewes. We conclude that immunization against androstenedione increases the secretion rate of androstenedione and progesterone but not of oestradiol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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