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1.
Levels of luteinizing hormone (LH), estradiol-17 beta and progesterone were determined by specific radioimmunoassays in sera obtained from Beagle bitches during proestrus, estrus and diestrus. Concentrations of LH (expressed as NIH-LH-SI equivalents) were 2.8 plus or minus 0.1 ng/ml in proestrus, 35.5 plus or minus 10.0 ng/ml during early estrus and 2.2 plus or minus 0.1 ng/ml in early diestrus. Peak levels of estradiol-17beta (68.9 plus or minus 11.0 ng/ml) were detected 24 hr prior to the LH peak, declined rapidly and reached basal levels (17.8 plus or minus 6.3 ng/ml) by five days following the LH peak. Levels of progesterone were 1.7 plus or minus 0.3 ng/ml during proestrus, 3.5 plus or minus 0.3 ng/ml during early estrus and 23.3 plus or minus 2.8 ng/ml on day 5 after the LH peak . Progesterone levels remained elevated through day 28 of diestrus and pregnancy. A significant decrease (p smaller than 0.05) in levels of prosgesterone occurred between day 28 of pregnancy and one day prior to shelping (3.3 plus or minus 1.2 ng/ml, with a further decrease on the day of whelping (1.1 plus or minus 0.2 ng/ml). Levels of estradiol-17beta and LH did not change significantly (p smaller than 0.0k) during diestrus or pregnancy.  相似文献   

2.
During the follicular phase of bactrian camels, basal concentrations of LH were 2.7 +/- 1.2 ng/ml. By 4 h after insemination peak values of 6.9 +/- 1.0 ng/ml occurred. In addition, a smaller LH peak (5.4 +/- 2.5 ng/ml) appeared 1 day before regression of the follicle began in unmated camels. During the follicular phase peripheral plasma progesterone values were low (0.36 +/- 0.28 ng/ml), but values increased to reach 1.73 +/- 0.74 ng/ml at 3 days and 2.4 +/- 0.86 ng/ml at 7 days after ovulation. Plasma oestradiol-17 beta concentrations were 26.8 +/- 9.0 pg/ml during the follicular phase and 30.8 +/- 5.1 pg/ml when the follicle was maximum size. Values fell after ovulation but rose to 29.8 +/- 6.5 pg/ml 3 days later.  相似文献   

3.
Granulosa-lutein cells were harvested from periovulatory follicles in human ovaries and cultured for up to 6 days, equivalent to almost half of a normal luteal phase. The average rate of basal progesterone accumulation in the culture medium was constant at approximately 36 nmol progesterone/10(6) cells/day. Oestradiol accumulation was too low to measure in the absence of precursor androgen. Basal aromatase activity (measured as oestradiol formed in 3 h from 10(-6) M exogenous testosterone) was high (average 1.15 nmol oestradiol/10(6) cells/3 h) at the time of cell isolation (Day 0) but fell by greater than 90% on Day 1. By Day 2 the activity had partly recovered and averaged 62% of the Day 0 value, rising to 70% on Day 6. This loss and recovery of aromatase activity was independent of the addition of gonadotrophic hormones to the culture medium. However, dose-related increases in aromatase activity occurred in the presence of highly pure human pituitary LH (0.1-30 ng/ml). The increase was observed on Day 4 and was maximal on Day 6 (average 3-fold increase over control) in the presence of LH concentrations greater than or equal to 1.0 ng/ml. LH also caused dose-related increases in progesterone accumulation by Day 4 with maximal stimulation on Day 6 (average 3-fold increase over control) at greater than or equal to 10.0 ng/ml. Dose-related stimulation of aromatase activity by human pituitary FSH also occurred but maximal stimulation required the presence of 300 ng FSH/ml and progesterone accumulation was hardly affected at this dose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether progesterone exerted progesterone receptor mediated direct effects on the anterior pituitary in the secretion of FSH and whether such effects were mediated through the 5 alpha-reduction of progesterone. Treatment of anterior pituitary dispersed cells for 48 h with 0.5 nM estradiol reduced the ED50 for gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH)-stimulated FSH release from 0.58 to 0.36 ng/ml and the ED50 for GnRH-induced LH release from 0.54 to 0.19 ng/ml. When dispersed pituitary cells were treated with 0.5 nM estradiol and exposed to various doses of progesterone for 1 to 6 h, the most consistent rise in basal and GnRH-stimulated FSH release was observed with the 50 nM dose of progesterone with a 3-h exposure period. All three doses of progesterone elevated basal LH and GnRH-stimulated LH was increased by the 50 and 100 nM doses of progesterone during the 3-h period of treatment. Using the 50 nM dose of progesterone, basal and GnRH-stimulated LH was increased after 2, 3 and 6 h of progesterone treatment. When the period of exposure of progesterone was extended to 12, 36 or 48 h, there was a significant inhibition of GnRH-stimulated FSH release. GnRH-stimulated LH release was inhibited at 36 and 48 but not 12 h after progesterone treatment. These studies showed that the effect of progesterone administered for periods of 1 to 6 h enhanced the secretion of LH and FSH whereas progesterone administered for periods beyond 12 h inhibited FSH and LH release by dispersed pituitary cells in culture. These results are similar to those observed in vivo after progesterone treatment. Furthermore estrogen priming of the dispersed pituitary cells was necessary to observe the effects of progesterone. The progesterone antagonist RU486 prevented the progesterone-induced rise in GnRH-stimulated FSH release. Furthermore the 5 alpha-reductase inhibitor N,N-diethyl-4-methyl-3-oxo-4-aza-5 alpha-androstane- 17 beta-carboxamide also prevented the progesterone-induced rise in GnRH-stimulated FSH release in estrogen-treated dispersed pituitary cells. These results indicate that the anterior pituitary is a major site of action of progesterone in the release of FSH and that 5 alpha-reduction of progesterone plays an important role in FSH release.  相似文献   

5.
Hormonal changes, behaviour, ovulation and fertility were examined in response to coitus at two different times during oestrus in the female domestic cat housed in conditions of natural light (N = 13). On Day 2 or Day 4/5 of oestrus females were allowed 1 copulation in 15 min (single matings) or 2-3 copulations in 30 min (multiple matings). Plasma LH, oestradiol-17 beta and progesterone concentrations during the 24-h period after coitus were measured by radioimmunoassay; ovulation was assumed to have occurred if progesterone values were elevated 7-30 days after coitus. With the exception of 2 out of 3 animals receiving single matings on Day 2 of oestrus, all animals showed subsequent elevated progesterone values. Females receiving multiple matings had significantly greater releases of LH as measured by the area under the curve than those receiving single matings. There was significantly greater variability in the LH response of queens on Day 2 of oestrus compared to those on Day 4/5 for peak values and area under the curve; the only failure in release of LH was in queens on Day 2. Oestradiol levels did not differ significantly between Day 2 and Day 4/5 of oestrus. Progesterone values remained less than 1 ng/ml for 24 h after coitus. Both LH peak values and area under the curve were significantly greater for animals that became pregnant. There were also significant differences in coital behaviour between queens on Day 2 and those on Day 4/5 of oestrus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
In 25, 3-to-13 year old, dairy cows (Braunvieh and Hoehenfleckyieh) FSH, LH and progesterone plasma profiles were determined by RIA. Blood was sampled at 6-hour intervals from parturition to 40–78 days postpartum, and the results correlated with the commencement of cyclic functions. For FSH, generally basic values were recorded, without characteristic features associating any values with the onset of cyclic ovarian activities or the occurrence of the first heat. LH profiles varied greatly between individuals with regard to the onset of elevations, regularity of patterns and peak values. The first preovulatory LH peak was recorded 17.3±9.8 days (range 4–46) postpartum. The first heat occurred on day 28.4±16 (range 6–55) postpartum, indicating that 13/23 cows ovulated without behavioral estrus, as reproductive cycles were re-established. Peak LH values increased with progressive cycles (1st peak 5.7±4.8 ng/ml; 2nd peak 11.8±8.7 ng/ml; 3rd peak 13.5±9.9 ng/ml plasma). Progesterone values also showed great variations in the profile of their first postpartum elevation. In 13/25 cows the first cycle was shortened (13.1±2.9 days), prolonged in 3 animals (34±4 days) and normal in 7 cows (20.4±1.9 days). Heat, preovulatory LH peak and progesterone profile were normal in all animals on subsequent cycles. Two animals did not start cycling.  相似文献   

7.
Fluorogestone acetate (vaginal sponge for 4 days) and PMSG (i.m. injection at the time of sponge insertion) treatment was administered to seven 3-month-old calves to induce superovulation. Samples of peripheral plasma were taken every 4 h during treatment (4 days) and then every 2 h for 7 days. FSH, LH, oestradiol and progesterone were measured by radioimmunoassays. In all calves oestradiol concentrations increased 24 h after PMSG injection and reached the highest levels (41-502 pg/ml) during the preovulatory surge of both gonadotropins. The surge of LH and FSH occurred from 12 to 22 h after cessation of treatment. The maximum levels of LH and FSH were 11-72 ng/ml and 23-40 ng/ml respectively and occurred within 4 h of each other. Between 40 and 68 h after the LH peak the concentrations of progesterone began to increase from basal values, reaching 24.0-101.7 ng/ml when the animals were killed. A quantitative relationship was found between plasma oestradiol concentration and the numbers of ovulating follicles. Progesterone levels seemed to be related to the numbers of corpora lutea and also to the numbers of unovulated follicles. Gonadotrophin output was not quantitatively related to ovarian activity or to steroid secretion.  相似文献   

8.
Objectives were to determine: 1) whether estradiol, given via implants in amounts to stimulate a proestrus increase, induces preovulatory-like luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) surges; and 2) whether progesterone, given via infusion in amounts to simulate concentrations found in blood during the luteal phase of the estrous cycle, inhibits gonadotropin surges. All heifers were in the luteal phase of an estrous cycle when ovariectomized. Replacement therapy with estradiol and progesterone was started immediately after ovariectomy to mimic luteal phase concentrations of these steroids. Average estradiol (pg/ml) and progesterone (ng/ml) resulting from this replacement were 2.5 and 6.2 respectively; these values were similar (P greater than 0.05) to those on the day before ovariectomy (2.3 and 7.2, respectively). Nevertheless, basal concentrations of LH and FSH increased from 0.7 and 43 ng/ml before ovariectomy to 2.6 and 96 ng/ml, respectively, 24 h after ovariectomy. This may indicate that other ovarian factors are required to maintain low baselines of LH and FSH. Beginning 24 h after ovariectomy, replacement of steroids were adjusted as follows: 1) progesterone infusion was terminated and 2 additional estradiol implants were given every 12 h for 36 h (n = 5); 2) progesterone infusion was maintained and 2 additional estradiol implants were given every 12 h for 36 h (n = 3); or 3) progesterone infusion was terminated and 2 additional empty implants were given every 12 h for 36 h (n = 6). When estradiol implants were given every 12 h for 36 h, estradiol levels increased in plasma to 5 to 7 pg/ml, which resembles the increase in estradiol that occurs at proestrus. After ending progesterone infusion, levels of progesterone in plasma decreased to less than 1 ng/ml by 8 h. Preovulatory-like LH and FSH surges were induced only when progesterone infusion was stopped and additional estradiol implants were given. These surges were synchronous, occurring 61.8 +/- 0.4 h (mean +/- SE) after ending infusion of progesterone. We conclude that estradiol, at concentrations which simulate those found during proestrus, induces preovulatory-like LH and FSH surges in heifers and that progesterone, at concentrations found during the luteal phase of the estrous cycle, inhibits estradiol-induced gonadotropin surges. Furthermore, ovarian factors other than estradiol and progesterone may be required to maintain basal concentrations of LH and FSH in heifers.  相似文献   

9.
Ovarian and endocrine responses in the cat after coitus   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
LH release leading to ovulation was induced in 17 of 29 oestrous periods. The time of ovulation after coitus was determined by histological examination or by observation at laparotomy of ovaries in situ. Histological methods revealed that ovulation was complete in most follicles (9 of 13) at 32 h post coitum and in all follicles that were involved in the ovulatory process by 36 h. When laparotomy was used, no signs of preovulatory change were noted at the first observation time, 22 h post coitum, but in 4 cycles in which the entire process of ovulation was observed, the ovulatory process occurred between 23 and 28 h (3 follicles), 23 and 27 h (2 follicles), 25 and 28 h (3 follicles), and 25 and 29 h (3 follicles) post coitum. The first ovulatory process noted was complete at 25 h post coitum. In cats, LH release continued over a 16-h period before returning to baseline (long surge), values being 616 +/- 180 ng/ml at 1/2 h and 941 +/- 154 ng/ml at 2 h post coitum. In 6 cats the LH release pattern was limited to a 4-h period (short surge), values being 537 +/- 218 ng/ml at 1/2 h and 353 +/- 245 ng/ml plasma at 2 h and basal (49 +/- 18 ng/ml) by 4 h post coitum. Decreased secretion of oestrogen by follicles in animals undergoing ovulation was first observed at 16 h post coitum. It is concluded that coitus induces LH release within minutes in the cat and that ovulation begins about 24 h later and finishes by about 32 h post coitum. Only one coital input can cause LH release for as long as 16-20 h although shorter periods of LH release (4 h or less) can result in ovulation.  相似文献   

10.
Plasma LH, FSH and testosterone concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassays in male crossbred Merino/Corriedale sheep from birth to 45 weeks of age. FSH levels were 11 and 22 ng/ml at birth, increased to peak levels (mean value of 47 ng/ml) at 5 weeks and fluctuated between 25 and 35 ng/ml for the next 40 weeks. Similarly, LH (less than 0-5 ng/ml) and testosterone (less than 38 ng/100 ml) levels were low at birth and were significantly elevated by 5 weeks of age. LH values varied betwen 0-9 and 3-0 ng/ml for the next 30 weeks and then a secondary rise occurred reaching levels of 2-4 ng/ml by the 41st week after birth. Concentrations of LH subsequently fell to levels observed in adult rams. Testosterone levels rose gradually between the 5th and the 25th week, and then increased rapidly to values of 270-517 ng/100 ml by the 41st week after birth, a time coincident with the peak LH levels. Histological examination of testicular biopsies demonstrated that Sertoli cell maturation occurred 17-21 weeks after birth and was followed by activation of spermatogenesis leading to the presence of spermatozoa in the seminiferous epithelium by 39-42 weeks of age.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Changes in immunoreactive (ir-) inhibin concentrations in serum throughout pregnancy and early lactation up to one month after parturition were characterized in 6 Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata fuscata) by a heterologous radioimmunoassay (RIA) based on a bovine RIA. Serum levels of FSH, LH/monkey chorionic gonadotropin (mCG), estradiol-17 beta, and progesterone were also monitored for the entire period. Ir-inhibin levels in the serum were low (under 0.5 ng/ml) before conception. Three marked increases in serum ir-inhibin levels were found during pregnancy. The first increase was noted during early pregnancy, with a peak (2.2 +/- 0.2 ng/ml) at Day 22 of pregnancy (Day 0 = day of LH surge). The second increase was noted after Day 38 until Day 72 of pregnancy, when a peak value was noted (19.0 +/- 1.4 pg/ml). Plateau levels were maintained until late pregnancy, and a final rise was evident near the term with a peak (36.7 +/- 3.8 ng/ml) at Day 158 of pregnancy, 5 days before parturition. After parturition, ir-inhibin levels in the serum plummeted to nonpregnant levels within one day, and were maintained during early lactation. The first rise in serum inhibin during pregnancy was parallel to the rise of mCG and estradiol-17 beta, and the second and third rise were well correlated with serum estradiol-17 beta. Serum FSH was maintained at low levels throughout pregnancy, followed by a slight increase after parturition when serum inhibin decreased abruptly. Both bioactivity and immunoreactivity of inhibin were detected in the placental homogenates obtained at 120 days of pregnancy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The patterns of LH, FSH, prolactin and oestradiol-17beta, before and during natural oestrus, and of progesterone during the following cycle were studied in four French Alpine dairy goats and compared with those obtained after synchronization of oestrus in the same animals. The highest concentration of oestradiol-17beta was measured at the beginning of oestrus and was followed 3 hours later by simultaneous rises of LH, FSH and prolactin. A second FSH peak was observed 48h after the first one. On D(3) (D(0) = day of oestrus) progesterone concentration was over 1 ng/ml. The luteal phase lasted 15 days. Peak concentrations of oestradiol-17beta and progesterone were higher in animals when oestrus was induced. This was attributed to their higher ovulation rate. The second FSH peak was lower, and the interval between oestradiol-17beta peak and gonadotrophin surge longer, than at natural oestrus.  相似文献   

14.
In the brown hare, fertile mating takes place from the beginning of December to September. Pituitary and ovarian response to a monthly i.v. injection of 5 micrograms LHRH was studied from September 1983 to October 1984 in 2 groups of 6 hares. The basal concentrations of LH remained undetectable until the end of January, rose from 0.23 +/- 0.14 ng/ml from February to a maximum of 1.44 +/- 0.57 ng/ml in July. LHRH injection was always followed by a release of LH. Between September and December, the LH value peaked 15 min after injection and returned to basal concentrations 2 h later. From January, this pattern altered and a second peak of LH appeared 2 h after injection. Peak levels 15 min after LHRH were around 10 ng/ml between September and December, increased from 47.0 +/- 8.0 ng/ml in January to 106 +/- 33 ng/ml in July and decreased in August (69.4 +/- 10.6 ng/ml). The values of the second peak rose from 11.0 +/- 2.2 ng/ml in January to 90.6 +/- 12.4 ng/ml between March and July and decreased in August (24.5 +/- 5.1 ng/ml). The LH surge induced by LHRH was always followed by a transient rise in progesterone. During the breeding season, this progesterone secretion increased considerably. Ovulation was possible between January and August and the number of ovulating females was maximum between March and July. The amount and duration of progesterone secretion during the resulting pseudopregnancies increased during the breeding season.  相似文献   

15.
In mice deficient in progesterone receptor (PR), follicles of ovulatory size develop but fail to ovulate, providing evidence for an essential role for progesterone and PR in ovulation in mice. However, little is known about the expression and regulation of PR mRNA in preovulatory follicles of ruminant species. One objective of this study was to determine whether and when PR mRNA is expressed in bovine follicular cells during the periovulatory period. Luteolysis and the LH/FSH surge were induced with prostaglandin F(2alpha) and a GnRH analogue, respectively, and the preovulatory follicle was obtained at 0, 3.5, 6, 12, 18, or 24 h after GnRH treatment. RNase protection assays revealed a transient increase in levels of PR mRNA, which peaked at 6 h after GnRH and declined to the time 0 value by 12 h and a second increase at 24 h. The second objective was to investigate the mechanisms that regulate PR mRNA expression through in vitro studies on follicular cells of preovulatory follicles obtained before the LH/FSH surge. Theca and granulosa cells were isolated and cultured with or without a luteinizing dose of LH or FSH, progesterone, LH + progesterone, or LH + antiprogestin (RU486). Levels of PR mRNA increased in a time-dependent manner in granulosa cells cultured with LH or FSH and in theca cells cultured with LH, peaking at 10 h of culture. In contrast, progesterone (200 ng/ml) did not upregulate mRNA for its own receptor, and neither progesterone nor RU486 affected LH-stimulated PR mRNA accumulation. Furthermore, RU486 completely blocked LH-stimulated expression of oxytocin mRNA, indicating that PR induced by LH in vitro is functional. These results show that the gonadotropin surge induces a rapid and transient increase in expression of PR mRNA in both theca and granulosa cells of bovine periovulatory follicles followed by a second rise close to the time of ovulation and that the first increase in PR mRNA can be mimicked in vitro by gonadotropins but not by progesterone. These results suggest multiple and time-dependent roles for progesterone and PR in the regulation of periovulatory events in cattle.  相似文献   

16.
Blood samples were collected from primiparous sows via indwelling jugular cannulae at 15-min intervals for 12 h before and for 24 h (2 sows) or 48 h (10 sows) after weaning and then every 4 h until behavioural oestrus. Weaning to oestrus intervals ranged from 3 to 10 days and 2 sows showed no signs of oestrus and had not ovulated by Days 11 and 16 after weaning. Prolactin concentrations in plasma decreased significantly (P less than 0.001) and reached basal levels 1-2 h after weaning in all sows whilst plasma progesterone concentrations remained basal until approximately 30 h after the preovulatory LH surge in sows that ovulated. Elevated concentrations of prolactin or progesterone during the post-weaning period were, therefore, not responsible for delayed restoration of cyclicity. Overall, mean LH concentrations rose significantly (P less than 0.001) from 0.22 +/- 0.02 during the 12-h period before weaning to 0.38 +/- 0.03 ng/ml during the 12-h post-weaning period. After weaning, pulsatile and basal LH secretions were markedly increased for sows that showed an early return to oestrus (less than or equal to 4 days) compared with sows showing a longer weaning to oestrus interval but a correlation did not exist between either of these LH characteristics and the time taken to resume cyclicity. Mean LH concentrations before weaning were, however, inversely related (r = -0.649; P less than 0.05) to the weaning to oestrus interval. Overall, mean FSH concentrations rose significantly (P less than 0.001) from 151.1 +/- 6.2 (s.e.m.) ng/ml in the 12-h period immediately before weaning to 187.7 +/- 9.7 ng/ml in the subsequent 12-h period but there was no correlation between FSH concentrations, before or after weaning, and the interval from weaning to oestrus. However, a significant correlation was apparent between ovulation rate and peak concentrations of the rise in FSH after weaning (r = 0.746; P less than 0.05) and overall mean FSH values (r = 0.645; P less than 0.05). It is concluded that both LH and FSH concentrations in peripheral blood rose in response to removal of the suckling stimulus at weanling. The increase in LH pulse frequency associated with weaning was not directly related to the weaning to oestrus interval although a specific pattern of LH secretion was observed in sows showing an early return to oestrus (less than or equal to 4 days).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
18.
The ability of gonadotropins from six mammalian species to stimulate estrogen and progesterone production was investigated in granulosa cells of hypophysectomized estrogen-primed immature female rats. Granulosa cells were cultured for 2 days in the presence of delta 4-androstenedione (10(-7) M) with or without various gonadotropin preparations. Treatment with follitropin (follicle-stimulating hormone, FSH) from human, rat, ovine, porcine, equine, and bovine origins resulted in dose-dependent increases in steroidogenesis from negligible amounts to maximal levels of approximately 4-8 and 12-30 ng/10(5) cells for estrogen and progesterone, respectively. The ED50 values of the FSH preparations for stimulation of steroidogenesis were: human: 1-4 ng/ml; ovine: 2.5-30 ng/ml; rat: 1.6-4.0 ng/ml; porcine: 7.5-20 ng/ml; equine 2.5-6 ng/ml; and bovine greater than 100 ng/ml. Lutropin (luteinizing hormone, LH) from rat, ovine, bovine, and porcine origins, human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), the alpha-subunit of human FSH and the beta-subunit of human LH were ineffective in stimulating steroidogenesis, indicating the specificity of the assay system for FSH. In a high concentration (600 ng/ml), the beta-subunit of human FSH-stimulated steroidogenesis to a small extent. Furthermore, pregnant mare serum gonadotropin and equine LH also caused a dose-dependent stimulation of estrogen and progesterone production, the half-maximal response values (ED50) being 1.8-4 and 7.5-10 ng/ml, respectively. This is consistent with previous in vivo and in vitro findings, showing the potent FSH activities of these hormones. Thus, the cultured rat granulosa cell system provides a sensitive assay for measuring FSH activities of gonadotropins from various mammalian species.  相似文献   

19.
Post-partum acyclic beef cows received continuous long-term treatment with GnRH (200 or 400 ng/kg body wt/h) or the GnRH agonist buserelin (5.5 or 11 ng/kg body wt/h) using s.c. osmotic minipumps which were designed to remain active for 28 days. All treatments increased circulating LH concentrations whereas FSH remained unchanged. Ovulation and corpus luteum (CL) formation as judged by progesterone concentrations greater than or equal to 1 ng/ml occurred in 0/5 control, 4/5 200 ng GnRH, 4/4 400 ng GnRH, 4/5 5.5 ng buserelin and 3/5 11 ng buserelin cows. The outstanding features of the progesterone profiles were the synchrony, both within and across groups, in values greater than or equal to 1 ng/ml around Day 6, and the fact that most CL were short-lived (4-6 days). Only 3 cows, one each from the 400 ng GnRH, 5.5 ng buserelin and 11 ng buserelin groups, showed evidence of extended CL function. Cows failed to show a second ovulation which was anticipated around Day 10 and this could have been due to insufficient FSH to stimulate early follicular development, or the absence of an endogenously driven LH surge. The highest LH concentrations for the respective groups were observed on Days 2 and 6 and by Day 10 LH was declining, although concentrations did remain higher than in controls up to Day 20.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The interrelationships of progesterone, estradiol, and LH were studied in mares (n=9), beginning at the first ovulation (Day 0) of an interovulatory interval. An increase in mean progesterone concentrations began on Day 0 and reached maximum on Day 6, with luteolysis beginning on Day 14. A common progesterone threshold concentration of about 2 ng/ml for a negative effect on LH occurred at the beginning and end of the luteal phase. Progesterone and LH concentrations decreased at a similar rate from Day 6 until the onset of luteolysis on Day 14, consistent with a decreasing positive effect of LH on progesterone. Concentrations of LH during the increase in the ovulatory surge consisted of two linear regression segments involving a rate of 0.4 ng/ml/day for Days 14-22 and 1.8 ng/ml/day for Day 22 to 1 day after the second ovulation. The end of the first segment and beginning of the second segment was 2 days before ovulation and was the day the ovulatory estradiol surge was at a peak.  相似文献   

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