Induction of ovulation in immature female rats by a single injection of 4-hydroxyoestradiol-dibenzoate

1982 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Günter Emons ◽  
Peter Ball

Abstract. This study was designed to test the ability of 2- and 4-hydroxyoestrogens to induce ovulations and the formation of corpora lutea in immature female rats. To this end 25 day old animals received a single injection of different doses of either 4-hydroxyoestradiol-dibenzoate (10, 25, 50 μg) or 2-hydroxyoestradiol-dibenzoate (25, 250 μg) or oestradiol-benzoate (10, 25, 50 μg). On day 31 the ovaries were checked for corpora lutea. 4-Hydroxyoestradiol-dibenzoate and oestradiol-benzoate in doses of 50 or 25 μg significantly increased the number of animals with corpora lutea whereas animals treated with 10 μg of either steroid did not differ significantly from the respective vehicle groups. 2-Hydroxyoestradioldibenzoate, even at the high dose of 250 μg did not show a significant effect. This is the first demonstration that a catecholoestrogen 4-hydroxyoestradiol - can induce ovulation. As its potency in doing so is similar to that of oestradiol and as 4-hydroxyoestradiol can be formed in neuroendocrine tissues from primary oestrogens, we conclude that this catecholoestrogen might play a role in the regulation of ovulation.

1987 ◽  
Vol 112 (3) ◽  
pp. 407-415 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. M. A. Meijs-Roelofs ◽  
P. Kramer ◽  
W. A. van Cappellen ◽  
G. A. Schuiling

ABSTRACT Subcutaneous injections of an LHRH antagonist (ALHRH; Org.30093) were administered to immature female rats. Neither a single high dose (50 μg) nor repeated daily doses of 5–30 μg ALHRH/day, administered between 28 and 38 days of age, influenced the age and body weight at the time of vaginal opening or first ovulation. If repeated daily doses of 2 × 10 μg ALHRH were given from 32 to 42 or from 37 to 47 days of age, first ovulation was delayed by 3·0 and 6·3 days respectively. Administration of 10 μg ALHRH at 09.00 h and again at 17.00 h on the day of first pro-oestrus was found to be sufficient to block the expected first ovulation in 36 out of 38 rats. This effect could be repeated by administering the same doses of ALHRH at pro-oestrus and again on the next day: ovulation was blocked in eight out of eight rats. A single dose of 10 μg ALHRH, administered on the morning of pro-oestrus, blocked ovulation in five out of twelve rats. Both the preovulatory LH and FSH surge, as measured at 16.00 h on pro-oestrus, were found to be inhibited by ALHRH treatment. On the day after pro-oestrus no recruitment of new small antral follicles had occurred in rats with ovulatory blockade. Delayed ovulation took place 2–5 days after ALHRH injection at pro-oestrus; until 3 days after injection rats were able to ovulate their original preovulatory follicles, thereafter newly developed follicles ovulated and large ovarian cysts were found in the ovaries, next to fresh corpora lutea. Chronic administration of two injections daily of 10 μg ALHRH from 34 days of age until the morning of first pro-oestrus had marginal effects on the timing of first pro-oestrus and on follicle dynamics. It was concluded that with the ALHRH compound used, and in chronic as well as in acute experiments, first ovulation could only be delayed by its administration on the day of first pro-oestrus and that the effect was due to acute inhibition of the preovulatory gonadotrophin surge. J. Endocr. (1987) 112, 407–415


1965 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 231-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Swelheim

ABSTRACT A single injection of 50 μg oestradiol benzoate, administered at 11 a.m. to adult female rats which had been spayed 14 days previously and had since been treated with 0.5 μg oestradiol benzoate daily, led to an increase in the ICSH-content of the serum, which was determined 29 hours after the injection. In an identical experimental design a decrease in the ICSH-content of the serum was found in adult male rats. ICSH-determinations were carried out by the ventral prostate assay. A stimulating effect upon the ventral prostate of oestrogen present in the serum used for the above determinations was excluded. At the time when the changes in the serum were established, there were no demonstrable changes in the ICSH-content of the anterior pituitary gland in both sexes. The existence of a fundamental sex difference in the response to a single high dose of oestrogen is suggested.


1969 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. H. NAQVI ◽  
D. C. JOHNSON

SUMMARY An increase in ovarian weight in immature rats after the injection of chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) was used to measure variations in endogenous follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) after steroid treatment. A single injection of several steroids (testosterone, androstenediol, androstenedione, oestradiol benzoate) given 12–96 hr. before treatment with HCG caused a 30–200% increase in ovarian weight. This was not a direct effect of the steroids since hypophysectomy abolished the response, and administration of the compounds concurrently with HCG was ineffective. Within certain limits an increase in the duration of pretreatment enhanced the ovarian response while an increase in the dose of steroid had little effect. Pretreatment with testosterone propionate did not change pituitary FSH activity, indicating that the increase in circulating FSH was due to an increased production of hormone. On the other hand, pituitary FSH in animals treated with oestradiol benzoate was significantly lowered within 72 hr. suggesting an increased release of FSH.


Author(s):  
T. M. Crisp ◽  
F.R. Denys

The purpose of this paper is to present observations on the fine structure of rat granulosa cell cultures grown in the presence of an adenohypophyseal explant and to correlate the morphology of these cells with progestin secretion. Twenty-six day old immature female rats were given a single injection of 5 IU pregnant mares serum gonadotropin (PMS) in order to obtain ovaries with large vesicular follicles. At 66 hrs. post-PMS administration (estrus indicated by vaginal smear cytology), the ovaries were removed and placed in a petri dish containing medium 199 and 100 U penicillin/streptomycin (P/S)/ml. Under a 20X magnification dissecting microscope, some 5-8 vesicular follicles/ovary were punctured and the granulosa cells were expressed into the surrounding medium. The cells were transferred to centrifuge tubes and spun down at 1000 rpm for 5 mins.


Zygote ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Stéphanie Ouabo Meguem ◽  
Landry Lienou Lienou ◽  
Marie Stéphanie Chekem Goka ◽  
Richard Simo Tagne ◽  
Didiane Mefokou Yemele ◽  
...  

Summary Dicliptera verticillata is a medicinal plant traditionally used in western Cameroon to cure female infertility. This experiment was designed to assess the effects of the aqueous extract of Dicliptera verticillata (AEDv) on fertility and gestation in female rats. Oral increasing doses of AEDv were administered to immature female rats over 20 d. After this time, some animals were mated with fertile males and some fertility parameters were assayed; the other animals were euthanized for preliminary toxicity parameters analysis. The effects of AEDv on the different stages of gestation were assayed on selected animals previously controlled for estrous cycle regularity and mated. AEDv led to an increase in serum, uterine and ovarian proteins as well as in ovarian and uterine weights (P < 0.05) in immature female rats. Hepatic proteins significantly decreased (P < 0.01) in high dose-treated animals (50 and 100 mg/kg) compared with controls. The number of implantation sites and the fertility rate were significantly lower (P < 0.05), while the antifertility activity increased significantly (P < 0.05) in treated rats compared with controls. When administered from the 1st to the 5th day of pregnancy, AEDv led to a decrease of more than 60% in the implantation rate in high dose-treated rats (50, 100, and 400 mg/kg). From the 6th to the 9th day, the implantation, gestation rates and the number of fetuses decreased significantly in all treated groups. From the 11th to the 20th day, a 50% resorption and decrease in gestation rate were reported in 50 mg/kg dose-treated animals. AEDv possesses weak contraceptive and abortifacient effects during pregnancy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 63-75
Author(s):  
Saman Saedi ◽  
Mohammad Reza Jafarzadeh Shirazi ◽  
Mohammad Javad Zamiri ◽  
Mehdi Totonchi ◽  
Mohammad Dadpasand ◽  
...  

Cadmium (Cd) has been associated with several physiological problems including reproductive and endocrine system dysfunction resulting in temporary infertility. The principal objective of this project was to investigate the effects of prepubertal exposure to toxic doses of Cd on puberty onset, the endocrine system, and follicular development. For this purpose, 16 female Sprague-Dawley rats weaned on postnatal day (PND) 21 were randomly divided into 4 groups ( n = 4 per group). The treatments were as follows: 0, 25, 50, and 75 mg/kg/day of cadmium chloride (CdCl2) by oral gavage from PND 21 to observation of first vaginal opening (VO). The results demonstrated that prepubertal exposure to different doses of CdCl2 delays the age of VO, first diestrus, and first proestrus via altering the concentrations of estradiol and progesterone. The low level of these steroid hormones contributed to lower differentiation and maturation of follicles and it finally led to reduced ovarian reservoir of follicles and impaired follicular development. The number of atretic follicles and secondary follicles with premature cavity increased in rats that received a high dose of CdCl2, whereas the number of secondary follicles and corpora luteum decreased in the same circumstances. Taken together, these data suggest that prepubertal exposure to toxic doses of Cd delays the onset of puberty via disorderliness in the concentration of steroid hormones and reduces the ovarian reservoir of follicles, as well as folliculogenesis.


1977 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 315-NP ◽  
Author(s):  
A. DANGUY ◽  
J. L. PASTEELS ◽  
F. ECTORS

A single injection of 1 mg of a complex of testosterone esters on day 5 of life was used to prepare constantly oestrous rats. Such androgenized female rats were then ovariectomized and submitted to stereotaxical implantation of 1 μg oestradiol benzoate, 5 μg testosterone isobutyrate or, as a control, 10 μg cholesterol in the anterior hypothalamic areas. The effects of the steroids on plasma and pituitary FSH and LH were assessed by radioimmunoassay. As reported previously by us in normal female and male rats, the preoptic–suprachiasmatic area (POA) was able to control synthesis and secretion of both gonadotrophins and did not lose its sensitivity to oestradiol and testosterone in androgenized rats. Evidence for enhanced prolactin secretion in androgenized rats was derived from immunofluorescence studies of the pituitary gland and from histology of the mammary glands. In this respect the condition of the androgenized females was opposite to that of the males. The present work demonstrated that stimulation of prolactin secretion in androgenized female rats resulted from oestrogen action due to permanent oestrus rather than from impairment of hypothalamo-hypophysial relationships. Indeed, prolactin stimulation was suppressed when the androgenized rats were ovariectomized and restored when they were subsequently implanted with oestradiol in the POA.


1991 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
pp. 289-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. J. Sander ◽  
H. M. A. Meijs-Roelofs ◽  
E. C. M. van Leeuwen ◽  
P. Kramer ◽  
W. A. van Cappellen

ABSTRACT In late-prepubertal female rats passive immunoneutralization of endogenous inhibin was achieved by injection of inhibin antiserum. Effects on follicle population, timing of sexual maturation, ovulation rate at first and second oestrus and serum FSH levels were studied. Rats were injected with antiserum, (non-immune) control serum from castrated sheep (castrated serum) or their IgG fractions, or with saline on day 33 or 3 or 2 days (days −3/−2) before the expected day of first ovulation, day 38·5±0·2 (n = 70). Blood was collected from different subgroups at 8, 24 and 48 h, and at first and second oestrus after injection. At necropsy, ovaries were histologically prepared for differential counting of follicles (48 h and first oestrus) and counting of corpora lutea (CL; first and second oestrus) as an index of ovulation rate. Results from rats injected with either serum or its IgG fraction were not different, as was the case when rats were injected with either castrated serum or saline. Thus, results from groups treated with antiserum and antiserum IgG were combined and labelled 'antiserum', and the castrated serum, castrated serum IgG and saline-treated groups were combined and labelled 'control'. The activity of inhibin-neutralizing antibodies in the circulation of antiserum-treated rats was reduced by 43% between 8 h and second oestrus after injection, as determined by the binding of purified bioactive radioiodinated 31 kDa bovine inhibin. After antiserum injection on day 33, more healthy antral follicles (vol. > 100 × 105 μm3, diameter > 260 μm) were present in the ovaries at 48 h (70·6 vs 54·4; P < 0·05) and at first oestrus (73·1 vs 50·8; P < 0·05) if first oestrus was reached within 5 days, but numbers were not different if first oestrus was more than 5 days after injection (52·6 vs 50·8). The number of CL after injection of antiserum on day 33 was increased at first oestrus compared with control (13·4±0·5, n = 30, vs 10·0±0·2, n = 40; P<0·001), an effect that was even more clearly present in antiserum-injected rats ovulating within 5 days (14·4±0·7, n = 20; P < 0·001). Rats injected with antiserum at days −3/−2 showed a doubling of ovulation rate at first oestrus when compared with control animals (21·5±0·8, n = 12, vs 10·5±0·2, n = 15; P < 0·001). No differences in the number of CL was seen at second oestrus. Age and body weight on the day of first ovulation were not influenced by antiserum treatment. Serum FSH was significantly (P < 0·01) increased at 8 h after antiserum injection on either day 33 or on days −3/−2 to a level of 250 and 800% of control levels respectively. Thus, injection with inhibin–neutralizing antiserum into prepubertal female rats resulted, through an increase in serum FSH concentration 8 h after injection, in the growth of additional numbers of healthy antral follicles. Supranormal ovulation rate occurred if antiserum injections were given within the last 5 days before first ovulation, with a maximal ovulation rate after injection on days −3/−2. The data support the view that, in the immature female rat during the last 5 days before the day of first ovulation, inhibin is (through its regulation of serum FSH levels) progressively involved in the control of follicle growth and ovulation rate. Journal of Endocrinology (1991) 130, 289–296


1965 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 491-499 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. DÖCKE ◽  
G. DÖRNER

SUMMARY To study the positive feed-back mechanism by which oestrogen induces corpus luteum formation, electrolytic lesions were placed in different parts of the anterior hypothalamus of prepubertal female rats which were then injected with oestradiol benzoate. Ovarian luteinization did not occur when the main parts of the suprachiasmatic nuclei or of the medial preoptic area had been destroyed. Oestradiol benzoate was implanted stereotaxically into the brain and the anterior pituitary of immature female rats. Whereas 1/25 of the subcutaneously effective dose had to be implanted into the anterior hypothalamus, 1/100 of the peripherally effective dose introduced into the adenohypophysis was sufficient to induce corpus luteum formation in most of the treated animals. The results suggest that, although the anterior hypothalamus is necessary for this positive feed-back mechanism, the anterior pituitary may be the main site of action of oestrogen. Oestrogen may increase the hypophysial sensitivity to the hypothalamic gonadotrophin-releasing factor. Thus an enhanced gonadotrophin secretion may result, sufficient for the induction of ovulation. The possibility is discussed that this positive feed-back mechanism is also essential for the induction of ovulation in women.


1954 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 359-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANITA M. MANDL

SUMMARY The sensitivity of adrenalectomized, control-operated and unoperated rats to pregnant mare serum (PMS) and chorionic gonadotrophin (CG) has been studied. A total of 638 mature and immature female rats was used. The ovaries of adrenalectomized rats were found to contain fewer large follicles and corpora lutea than those of control-operated litter-mates, and the slight ovarian hypertrophy which occurs after surgical trauma was found to be due to an increase in the number of Graafian follicles and corpora lutea. Further experiment showed that, as judged by the weight of the ovaries, adrenalectomy reduces the ovarian reaction to injected PMS (10 i.u./day) in both adult and immature rats. Replacement therapy with DCA (1 mg/day) failed to re-establish the normal response in adults. Treatment with cortisone (1 mg/day) restored the normal reaction in both adult and immature adrenalectomized rats. Adrenalectomized adult rats responded to injected CG (10 i.u./day) as vigorously as their operated and unoperated litter-mates. On the other hand, immature adrenalectomized animals did not respond fully to CG. Treatment with cortisone again fully restored the normal reaction.


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