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Endocrinology, Vol 99, 852-860, Copyright © 1976 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Ovarian regulation of postcoital gonadotropin release in the rabbit: reexamination of a functional role for 20 alphadihydroprogesterone

AL Goodman and JD Neill

In the rabbit, it has proposed that an ovarian progestin, 20 alpha- dihydroprogesterone (20alphaP), released at mating, is essential for a normal postcoital LH surge. However, we measured plasma levels of LH and 20alphaP after mating in rabbits and observed that the frequency, magnitude and time-course of changes in circulating levels of 20alphaP seemed inappropiate to account for the rapid and major surge of LH secretion. This prompted us to re-evalute the role of the ovary in regulating postcoital LH secretion. In chronically ovariectomized (greater than 30 days) does pretreated with estrogen, mating induced a normal LH surge in only 1 of 10 animals, indicating that an ovarian product in addition to estrogen is required for a normal postcoital LH surge. However, when 20alphaP was injected soon after mating in chronically ovariectomized does pretreated with estrogen, only 2 of 9 displayed normal LH surges; this proportion is not different from that (1/10) observed with estrogen treatment alone. To demonstrate that the estrogen treatment, which produced supraphysiologic plasma estradiol levels, did not itself block LH release, 6 intact anestrus females were treated with the same estrogen regimen. Estrus was induced in 5 and each displayed a large post-coital LH surge and ovulated. As a final test of the 20alphaP hypothesis, 5 spontaneously estrous does were ovariectomized within 15 min post coitum to abolish acute increases in circulating ovarian hormones. Three animals released LH in amounts and temporal pattern indistinguishable from intact estrous does. A fourth released smaller amounts of LH. Two of 4 sham-operated does also had normal LH surges. These findings indicate that ovarian hormones are required before mating to support the capacity of the LH secretory mechanism to respond to coitus. Chronic alteration in the hormonal milieu by ovariectomy appears to produce a change in the hypothalamo- hypophysial complex that is not reversed by estrogen, alone. More importantly, these results demonstrate clearly that neither 20alphaP nor any other ovarian hormone is required post coitum, at least after 15 min, for normal LH release.


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S D Johnston, P O'Callaghan, K Nilsson, G Tzipori, and J D Curlewis
Semen-induced luteal phase and identification of a LH surge in the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus)
Reproduction, November 1, 2004; 128(5): 629 - 634.
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