Author:
Armstrong D. T.,Dorrington J. H.,Robinson J.
Abstract
Changes in levels of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), prostaglandin F (PGF), progesterone, testosterone, and estradiol-17β, in preovulatory rat ovaries induced by exogenous luteinizing hormone (LH) have been measured. Ovarian cAMP reached maximal levels 15 min and 1 h 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-17β 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-17β) 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.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Cited by
39 articles.
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