Abstract: | Mixed and muscarinic cholinergic agonists (acetylcholine, carbamylcholine, methacholine, oxotremorine, and pilocarpine) accelerated in a dose-dependent manner the progesterone-induced maturation of Xenopus laevis oocytes. None of these agonists induced oocyte maturation in the absence of progesterone. The accelerating effect of cholinergic agonists was blocked in a dose-dependent manner by specific muscarinic antagonists (atropine and scopolamine) but not by specific nicotinic antagonists (d-tubocurarine and hexamethonium). The specific nicotinic agonist, dimethylphenylpiperazine, alone induced maturation in the absence of progesterone. The optimal promoting effect of acetylcholine was observed when oocytes were exposed to acetylcholine for 30 min, 5 min after the addition of progesterone, and was markedly better than when oocytes were exposed to acetylcholine throughout their incubation with progesterone. The effect of acetylcholine was observed in both follicle-enclosed and in defolliculated oocytes, indicating that follicular cells were not the target of the cholinergic drugs. |