Concentrations of progesterone and oestradiol-17β after administration of a 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase inhibitor to sheep in late pregnancy

1987 ◽  
Vol 113 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Taylor

ABSTRACT An inhibitor of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3β-HSD) activity was administered to sheep in late pregnancy. A rapid fall in plasma progesterone concentrations followed, associated with premature delivery by all animals 44±3 h (s.e.m.) after administration of inhibitor. A significant (about twofold) increase in plasma concentrations of oestradiol-17β was detected immediately before delivery. These results demonstrate, in contrast to previous reports, that 3β-HSD inhibitors have the capacity consistently to induce premature delivery associated with increased oestrogen release in sheep. J. Endocr. (1987) 113, 97–101

1986 ◽  
Vol 111 (3) ◽  
pp. 469-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. M. Wintour ◽  
R. J. Bell ◽  
R. S. Carson ◽  
R. J. MacIsaac ◽  
G. W. Tregear ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Synthetic ovine corticotrophin-releasing factor (oCRF) was infused continuously into the jugular veins of six ovine fetuses for 5–11 days. Two fetuses receiving 0·1 and 1·0 μg oCRF/h from gestational days 134 and 135 respectively, lambed prematurely on days 141 and 140 respectively. Three out of four fetuses receiving oCRF at 2·4 μg/h, from 125 days of gestation, delivered spontaneously at 131, 131 and 136 days, whilst one died in utero at 132 days. Two fetuses receiving vehicle only or oCRF intra-amniotically, were born at 148 and 145 days respectively, whilst six fetuses chronically cannulated but not infused were born at 149·8 ±2·1 (s.d.) days. In ewes lambing at term, maternal plasma progesterone concentrations were 41·4±11·4 (s.e.m.; n = 5), 28·8±7·8 (n = 6), 17·1 ±4·8 (n = 5) and 7·9± 1·1 (n = 4) nmol/l on 3, 2, 1 and 0 days respectively before the lambs were born. No such decrease in maternal plasma progesterone concentrations was seen in the oCRF-infused fetuses. Fetal plasma concentrations of immunoreactive ACTH were maintained above normal in oCRF-infused fetuses, but some desensitization to bolus oCRF injections occurred in these fetuses. Four of the five fetuses born prematurely were sufficiently mature to survive, being able to stand, breathe and suckle. It is concluded that continuous oCRF infusions into immature fetuses can accelerate maturation of a number of organs and systems culminating in the premature delivery of viable lambs. J. Endocr. (1986) 111, 469–475


1982 ◽  
Vol 92 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. TAYLOR ◽  
R. WEBB ◽  
M. D. MITCHELL ◽  
J. S. ROBINSON

The concentration of progesterone in the peripheral plasma of seven sheep during late pregnancy was reduced by injection of an inhibitor of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity. Concentrations of progesterone were 10·0± 1·0(s.e.m.) ng/ml (n = 6) before injection of the inhibitor, fell to 1·39 ± 0·40 ng/ml (n = 6) 30 min after injection, and remained within this lowered range for 6 h after injection. By 20–24 h and 30–35 h after injection progesterone concentrations had recovered to 4·63±0·94 and 14·07 ±4·17 ng/ml respectively (n = 6). Six out of seven ewes delivered prematurely 32·5± 2·9 h after injection. Delivery appeared to be normal, and was associated with increasing concentrations of 13,14-dihydro-15-oxo prostaglandin F2α in peripheral plasma. Concentrations of oestradiol-17β17β in peripheral plasma were slightly raised immediately before delivery, at which time progesterone concentrations were within the preinjection range. These data suggest that progesterone withdrawal is one mechanism that initiates increased prostaglandin F2α secretion in the pregnant sheep.


1988 ◽  
Vol 118 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. V. DePaolo

ABSTRACT Epostane, an inhibitor of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, was administered orally to pro-oestrous rats to evaluate further a possible role for preovulatory progesterone secretion in eliciting surges of LH and FSH. Whereas a dose of 10 mg epostane/kg had essentially no effects on preovulatory gonadotrophin surges and ovulation, 200 mg epostane/kg markedly attenuated LH and FSH surges and blocked ovulation. A dose of 50 mg epostane/kg exerted effects on LH and FSH surges and ovulation intermediate between those of doses of 10 and 200 mg/kg. Plasma concentrations of progesterone were significantly lower in all anovulatory epostane-treated rats at 18.00 and 22.00 h on pro-oestrus than those measured in vehicle-treated rats. Concurrent injection of 2 mg progesterone in rats given 200 mg epostane/kg restored gonadotrophin surges to normal, but consistently failed to reverse the inhibitory effects of epostane on ovulation. Peak plasma progesterone levels produced by the progesterone injections were eight- to tenfold higher than the highest levels measured in vehicle-treated rats during the afternoon of pro-oestrus. Insertion of progesterone capsules was less effective than injections of progesterone in restoring gonadotrophin surges to normal, even though peak plasma progesterone concentrations achieved after insertion of two 20 mm long progesterone capsules were double the peak progesterone concentrations measured in control rats. Nevertheless, taken together with recent reports showing attenuation of preovulatory gonadotrophin surges by the progesterone antagonist RU 486 (17β-hydroxy-11β-[4-dimethyl-aminophenyl]-17α-[prop-1-ynl]estra-4,9-diene-3-one), the present results provide support for a role of preovulatory progesterone secretion in enhancing oestrogen-dependent LH/FSH surges on pro-oestrus. J. Endocr. (1988) 118, 59–68


1978 ◽  
Vol 78 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. BARNES ◽  
R. S. COMLINE ◽  
L. B. JEFFCOTT ◽  
M. D. MITCHELL ◽  
P. D. ROSSDALE ◽  
...  

SUMMARY The concentrations of 13,14-dihydro-15-oxo-prostaglandin F (PGFM), the stable metabolite of prostaglandin F, were measured in the plasma of catheterized mares and foetuses and non-catheterized thoroughbred mares and ponies during the last months of gestation. The plasma concentration of PGFM increased gradually towards term in all groups of animals. During the operation for insertion of catheters, maternal and foetal concentrations of PGFM were high, but the values fell to basal levels 24–48 h after the operation. It was found that preoperative starvation (24 h) led to a rise in the concentration oef PGFM in th maternal plasma. The raised concentrations of PGFM during the operation were associated with low progestogen and high oestrogen concentrations in umbilical venous plasma. The subsequent survival period of the catheterized foal was inversely related to the maximum concentration of PGFM attained during the operation. Changes in the plasma concentration of PGFM were studied during normal parturition in thoroughbred mares, during oxytocin-induced delivery in non-catheterized ponies and during premature delivery or abortion in the catheterized animals. The greatest increase in the concentration of PGFM was seen in the thoroughbred animals during second-stage labour; oxytocin also resulted in a very rapid rise in the level of PGFM, which remained high until delivery. In the catheterized animals, the birth of live foetuses was associated with a rise in the concentration of PGFM in both foetal and maternal plasma during the last 2 h before delivery. Less consistent changes were found during abortion.


1995 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 1163 ◽  
Author(s):  
PA Towers ◽  
L Martin

Blood was collected from breeding-season and pregnant P. poliocephalus females shot in the wild and from captive pregnant and ovariectomized P. poliocephalus and P. scapulatus females. Peripheral plasma progesterone concentrations measured by radioimmunoassay were similar to those obtained by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy: in intact non-pregnant P. poliocephalus females without corpora lutea (CLs) values ranged from 2 to 30 ng mL-1; after ovariectomy, they ranged from 1 to 85 ng mL-1. A significant source of progesterone in these bats may be the adrenal. In P. poliocephalus, peripheral plasma progesterone concentrations showed relatively little change over the breeding season or in early pregnancy when a CL formed, but increased from mid pregnancy to reach 200-800 ng mL-1 in late pregnancy. A mid-pregnancy ovary with CL contained 2.80 ng progesterone whereas the contralateral ovary contained 0.13 ng. Overall, CL size decreased during pregnancy and was negatively correlated with plasma progesterone concentrations. In late pregnancy, the main source of progesterone appears to be the placenta; plasma concentrations increase with placental growth and are significantly correlated with placental weight, and placentas contain 4-8 micrograms progesterone g-1. There was no evidence that progesterone concentrations fall before parturition. Limited observations indicated that peripheral progesterone concentrations follow similar patterns in P. scapulatus.


1988 ◽  
Vol 111 (3) ◽  
pp. 519-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. El-Belely ◽  
K. Zaki ◽  
E. Grunert

SummaryBlood samples were collected three times weekly for 21 days before and after calving (day 0) from 29 buffalo cows and 22 buffalo heifers. Plasma concentrations of progesterone and total oestrogens were quantified by validated radioimmunoassays. Ovarian activity and uterine involution were monitored by rectal palpation at the sampling times and extended up to 60 days postpartum. The concentration of plasma progesterone in cows declined from 3·0 ± 0·2 ng/ml (mean ± S.E.) during days 21–17 before calving to 2·1 ± 0·1 ng/ml at day −3, followed by a rapid fall during the last 3 days of gestation, reaching 1·2 ± 0·3 ng/ml at the day of parturition. In heifers, plasma progesterone values increased slightly from 2·9 ± 0·2 ng/ml at days 21–19 before parturition to 3·4 ± 0·3 ng/ml by day −1 and then fell sharply to 2·1 ± 0·1 ng/ml at calving time. During the postpartum period, plasma progesterone decreased gradually and reached baseline values after day 15 postpartum, when the residual corpus luteum of pregnancy had completely regressed in all the animals studied. The plasma concentrations of total oestrogens started to increase at day −15 in cows and day −5 in heifers from below 40 pg/ml to 122·5 ± 51 pg/ml for cows and 100·7 ± 3·4 pg/ml for heifers by day −1. This was followed by a sharp increase to 251·2 ± 17·3 and 240·5 ± 10·1 pg/ml in these animals at the day of calving. Immediately after parturition, total oestrogens dropped abruptly to the lowest values and remained below 30 pg/ml in all cows and heifers until the end of the sampling period. We concluded that female foetuses significantly (P < 0·05) increased the maternal total oestrogens. Moreover, animals having postpartum disorders had significantly higher values for progesterone (P < 0·05) and lower values for total oestrogens (P < 0·01) than those having normal puerperal periods, but the magnitude of this difference varied in samplings between cows and heifers.


1975 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 363-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. G. CHALLIS ◽  
I. J. DAVIES ◽  
K. J. RYAN

SUMMARY Pregnant rabbits were treated with indomethacin (8–10 mg/kg/day) or dexamethasone (1·2–1·8 mg/kg/day) during late gestation. The effects of these treatments on the concentrations of progesterone and prostaglandin F (PGF) in the peripheral plasma, and the outcome of gestation were studied. Treatment with indomethacin significantly prolonged the length of gestation (P < 0·01) compared with control, untreated animals. In these treated animals, the plasma progesterone levels declined at a similar time to that in control rabbits but the increase in systemic PGF normally seen during late pregnancy was reduced. Dexamethasone treatment reliably induced premature delivery within 3–6 days. The plasma progesterone concentration fell rapidly during the first 24 h of dexamethasone administration, but in no animal was this associated with a significant increase in the plasma levels of PGF. These results are consistent with the suggestion that prostaglandins are involved in the normal initiation of parturition in the rabbit. They do not support the hypothesis that the effect of dexamethasone on the length of gestation is mediated through an increase in the production of prostaglandin F.


1990 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 475-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Whitely ◽  
P. E. Hartmann ◽  
D. L. Willcox ◽  
G. D. Bryant-Greenwood ◽  
F. C. Greenwood

ABSTRACT The synthetic progestagen, medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA), was administered to sows in late pregnancy with the objective of slightly delaying the time of farrowing and thereby providing more marked associations between hormonal changes and the termination of pregnancy, and the initiation of farrowing and lactation in this species. MPA was administered orally (140 mg, twice daily) to eight sows in late pregnancy on days 112, 113 and 114 of gestation. Parturition was then induced to occur on day 116 by injecting 200 μg cloprostenol i.m. on day 115 of gestation. The peripartum changes in the plasma concentrations of progesterone, cortisol, oestradiol-17β, relaxin, prolactin, lactose and 13,14-dihydro-15-keto prostaglandin F2α (PGFM) were measured in these sows together with a group of untreated sows. The gestational length for the MPA-treated sows (116·3 ± 0·3 days, mean±s.e.m.) was significantly (P<0·01) greater compared with the untreated sows (114·9 ± 0·3 days). Plasma progesterone declined earlier (P<0·05) with respect to the time of parturition in the treated sows compared with the untreated group. With respect to the timing of parturition, the time at which maximal concentrations of relaxin were attained and the timing of the subsequent decline were earlier in the MPA-treated sows. In both groups of sows, the concentration of relaxin increased before the decline in plasma progesterone. In the untreated sows, the concentration of PGFM increased either slightly before or at the same time as the decline in plasma progesterone, whereas in sows treated with MPA, progesterone concentrations began to decline before any significant increase in the plasma concentration of PGFM. The profiles of cortisol, oestradiol-17β and PGFM were similar in both groups of sows. In both groups of sows, the timing of the initial increase in the concentration of plasma prolactin coincided with a similar rise in plasma lactose (P<0·01). Plasma progesterone either declined earlier or at the same time as the rise in plasma lactose (P<0·01) in the treated group of sows only. We conclude that since the prepartum changes in the concentration of progesterone and relaxin occurred before significant changes in the concentration of PGFM in the MPA-treated sows, the nature of the luteolytic factor and the mechanism by which it exerts its action remains obscure. The higher concentration of lactose in the mammary secretion at birth in the MPA-treated sows compared with the untreated group suggested that lactogenesis was initiated earlier with respect to parturition following MPA treatment. Furthermore, the administration of MPA to sows in late pregnancy delayed the onset of parturition but did not inhibit lactogenesis. Journal of Endocrinology (1990) 124, 475–484


1987 ◽  
Vol 113 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-493 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Taylor

ABSTRACT Epostane, an inhibitor of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, was administered to goats in late pregnancy in the presence or absence of concurrent treatment with prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors (indomethacin and diclofenac sodium) and the effect on steroidogenesis in the corpus luteum and adrenal cortex determined by measurement of peripheral concentrations of progesterone and cortisol respectively. Concentrations of both steroids were reduced to about 20% of pretreatment levels within 6 h of epostane administration. Cortisol concentrations subsequently increased about 24 h after epostane administration and returned to and exceeded pretreatment values, but progesterone concentrations remained suppressed until premature delivery, which occurred in all animals 44 ± 2 h (mean ± s.e.m.) after epostane administration. However, combined administration of epostane and prostaglandin synthetase inhibitor prevented the onset of labour in the majority of animals, but progesterone secretion in animals receiving this combined treatment did not differ from that in animals given epostane alone. It is concluded that progesterone withdrawal is an important component of the mechanisms which initiate parturition in the goat and that increased prostaglandin synthesis is essential for delivery in this species, but perhaps not for luteolysis. J. Endocr. (1987) 113, 489–493


1981 ◽  
Vol 90 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. HENDRICKS ◽  
C. A. BLAKE

The effects of varying amounts of copulatory stimulation on patterns of plasma concentrations of prolactin and progesterone were evaluated in 3- and 12-month-old female rats. The 12-month-old group included rats which still exhibited oestrous cycles and rats in persistent vaginal oestrus (PVO). The extent of copulatory stimulation was defined by the number of intromissions received during mating: ≤5,15 or > 50. Blood samples were drawn over the 8 days after mating through a cannula inserted into the right external jugular vein. Plasma from the samples was assayed for prolactin and progesterone. In aged but still cyclic rats, pregnancy rates were positively correlated with the number of intromissions received during mating. Only one rat in PVO became pregnant. All animals which became pregnant and rats in PVO which, after mating, exhibited a disruption of the pattern of PVO, showed the nocturnal surge of plasma prolactin characteristic of pregnant and pseudopregnant rats. While these surges persisted until day 8 after mating in pregnant animals, they were absent by this time in the rats in PVO. Prolactin surges were present in some but not all of the aged rats which did not become pregnant. Progesterone concentrations were raised in all pregnant animals except the one pregnant rat in PVO and, while not related to the number of intromissions, concentrations were higher 8 days after mating in young compared with those in aged pregnant rats. Plasma progesterone was low in rats in PVO regardless of disruption of the pattern of PVO. We have concluded that the failure of limited copulatory stimulation to induce pregnancy in older rats results, at least in part, from its failure to initiate nocturnal prolactin surges. Nevertheless, our data suggest that matings which are not experimentally limited should provide ample stimulation to establish such surges. Although reduced plasma concentrations of prolactin and progesterone at pro-oestrus and reduced plasma progesterone through part of gestation may contribute to decreasing fertility in aged rats, other unidentified factors appear to be involved in mediating the capacity of extensive copulatory stimulation to induce pregnancy in these animals.


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