Pregnancy stage determines the effect of chronic stress on ovarian progesterone synthesis

Author:

Wilsterman Kathryn1,Gotlieb Neta2,Kriegsfeld Lance J.23,Bentley George E.13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Integrative Biology, University of California Berkeley, California

2. Department of Psychology, University of California Berkeley, California

3. Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California Berkeley, California

Abstract

Although stress-induced glucocorticoid release is thought to be a primary driver by which maternal stress negatively impacts pregnancy outcomes, the downstream neuroendocrine targets mediating these adverse outcomes are less well understood. We hypothesized that stress-induced glucocorticoid secretion inhibits pituitary hormone secretion, resulting in decreased ovarian progesterone synthesis. Using a chronic restraint model of stress in mice, we quantified steroid hormone production, pituitary hormones, and expression of ovarian genes that support progesterone production at both early ( day 5) and midpregnancy ( day 10). Females subjected to daily restraint had elevated baseline glucocorticoids during both early and midpregnancy; however, lower circulating progesterone was observed only during early pregnancy. Lower progesterone production was associated with lower expression of steroidogenic enzymes in the ovary of restrained females during early pregnancy. There were no stress-related changes to luteinizing hormone (LH) or prolactin (PRL). By midpregnancy, circulating LH decreased regardless of treatment, and this was associated with downregulation of ovarian steroidogenic gene expression. Our results are consistent with a role for LH in maintaining steroidogenic enzyme expression in the ovary, but neither circulating PRL nor LH were associated with the stress-induced inhibition of ovarian progesterone production during early pregnancy. We conclude that chronic stress impacts endocrine networks differently in pregnant and nonpregnant mammals. These findings underscore the need for further studies exploring dynamic changes in endocrine networks participating in pregnancy initiation and progression to elucidate the physiological mechanisms that connect stress exposure to adverse pregnancy outcomes.

Funder

NSF

NIH

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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