scholarly journals Effect of Immunization Against Steroid-Free Bovine Follicular Fluid on Reproductive Hormones Profile in Cycling Female Rats

2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 183-188
Author(s):  
Alsaadi Jabbar Abbas Ahmed ◽  
Majhwol Ennas Mohammad
2021 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 14-20
Author(s):  
Omar H Azeez

Aspartame (ASP) is a sugar substitute. Its use rose because it has been demonstrated to have deleterious effects after being metabolized. In the presence of antioxidant vitamins C or E, the effects of ASP on reproductive hormones of adult male and female Albino Wister rats were investigated. A total of eighty male and female rats were used in this study. The rats were divided into four groups: group 1, received no treatment; group 2, received ASP at 40 mg/kg BW; group 3, received ASP at 40 mg/kg BW with vitamin C at 150 mg/kg BW; and group 4, received ASP at 40 mg/kg BW and vitamin E at 100 mg/kg BW. All treatments were given orally by gavage needle once daily for consecutive 90 days. The levels of estradiol (E2), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and testosterone hormone (TH) were measured after 90 days in blood plasma. In comparison with the control group, ASP treatment resulted in lower levels of E2, FSH, and LH in male and female rats. When the antioxidants vitamin C or E was given, the effects of ASP were reversed, and the levels of E2, LH, and FSH were increased. The testosterone hormone was likewise significantly increased by ASP, but testosterone hormone concentrations were decreased by vitamin C or E treatments. Long-term ASP consumption caused interfering with testicular and ovarian hormonal activity, while vitamins C and E on the other hand, overcome longstanding consumption ASP's effects.


Reproduction ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 129 (4) ◽  
pp. 463-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Shimizu ◽  
Izumi Ohshima ◽  
Manabu Ozawa ◽  
Satoko Takahashi ◽  
Atsushi Tajima ◽  
...  

Heat stress inhibits ovarian follicular development in mammalian species. We hypothesized that heat stress inhibits the function of follicular granulosa cells and suppresses follicular development. To test this, immature female rats were injected with pregnant mare serum gonadotropin (PMSG) at 48 h after the start of temperature treatment (control: 25 °C, 50% RH; heat stress: 35 °C, 70% Relative Humidity). The ovaries and granulosa cells of follicles at different developmental stages were analyzed for gonadotropin receptor levels and aromatase activity; estradiol levels were measured in follicular fluid. Before injection, heat stress diminished only the amount of FSH receptor on granulosa cells of antral follicles. During PMSG-stimulated follicular development, heat stress strongly inhibited gonadotropin receptor levels and aromatase activity in granulosa cells, and estradiol levels in the follicular fluid of early antral, antral and preovulatory follicles. To examine apoptosis and mRNA levels of bcl-2 and bax in granulosa cells, follicles harvested 48 h after PMSG injection were cultured in serum-free conditions. Heat-stressed granulosa cells showed a time-dependent increase in apoptosis. The bcl-2 mRNA levels were similar in control and heat-stressed granulosa cells; bax mRNA levels were increased in heat-stressed granulosa cells. According to these results, heat stress inhibits expression of gonadotropin receptors in granulosa cells and attenuates estrogenic activity of growing follicles, granulosa cells of heat-stressed follicles are susceptible to apoptosis, and the bcl2/bax system is not associated with heat-stress-induced apoptosis of granulosa cells. Our study suggests that decreased numbers and function of granulosa cells may cause ovarian dysfunction in domestic animals in summer.


1992 ◽  
Vol 262 (1) ◽  
pp. G185-G190
Author(s):  
R. Khanna ◽  
R. M. Browne ◽  
A. D. Heiner ◽  
M. H. Clench ◽  
J. R. Mathias

Leuprolide acetate, a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogue, is currently being proposed to control debilitating symptoms in women with functional bowel disease. Whether leuprolide alters gastrointestinal motility as part of its actions is unknown. This study was designed to assess, using myoelectric techniques in an animal model, the effects of leuprolide on potential mechanisms of neuromuscular function of small intestine. Female rats with (n = 6) or without (n = 8) bilateral ovariectomy were used to study jejunal motility before and after leuprolide therapy. Throughout the study, daily leuprolide dosages of 0.02, 0.2, or 0.4 micrograms/kg were injected into intact rats and 0.02, 0.2, 0.4, 1.0, or 2.5 micrograms/kg into ovariectomized rats. Recordings were made while the rats were fasted and postprandial and before and after leuprolide administration. Under control conditions, migrating myoelectric complexes (MMCs) were found in intact female rats, whether fasted or postprandial. After ovariectomy, postprandial controls and those treated with low-dose leuprolide (0.02, 0.2, and 0.4 micrograms) had typical fed-state patterns and no MMCs, but at 1.0 and 2.5 micrograms the fed state was inhibited and cycling MMCs occurred at a frequency similar to that of fasted controls. Reproductive hormones thus have a significant effect on gastrointestinal motility.


1980 ◽  
Vol 95 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Knut Nordenström ◽  
Anita Sjögren ◽  
Lars Hamberger

Abstract. Immature female rats were injected sc with a single dose of PMSG to induce growth and maturation of ovarian follicles. In the morning of prooestrus the rats were given a single ip injection of LH (10 μg/rat) or 0.154 m NaCl, 2 h prior to sacrifice. Granulosa cells were isolated from the pre-ovulatory follicles and incubated in Krebs bicarbonate buffer, for 1 h with or without in vitro addition of various test substances. Following incubation the amounts of cAMP in tissue plus medium were determined. It was found that the isolated granulosa cells exposed to LH in vivo responded to the addition of LH in vitro with a production of high amounts of cAMP, i.e. these cells were not refractory to LH stimulation and in fact responded better than granulosa cells isolated from ovaries not exposed to LH in vivo. The addition to the incubation medium of follicular fluid (FFl) obtained from pre-ovulatory follicles decreased the effect of LH in vitro when added at a final concentration of 1% and completely abolished it at a concentration of 3%. Removal of steroids from the FFl did not influence the inhibitory effect and the addition of a phosphodiesterase inhibitor (IBMX) in vitro did not alter the results in principle. These results point to the existence of a factor in the FF1 which interacts with the sensitivity of the isolated preovulatory granulosa cells to repeated exposures to LH. Characterization of this factor is subject to further investigations.


2006 ◽  
Vol 291 (6) ◽  
pp. H3094-H3105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianjie Wang ◽  
Virginia H. Huxley

Little is known of the regulation of skeletal muscle microvascular exchange under resting or stimulating conditions. Adenosine (ADO) levels in skeletal muscle increase during physiological (exercise) and pathological (hypoxia, inflammation, and ischemia) conditions. Later stages of these pathologies are characterized by the loss of vascular barrier integrity. This study focused on determining which ADO receptor mediates the robust reduction in microvessel permeability to rat serum albumin ( PsRSA) observed in juvenile female rats. In microvessels isolated from abdominal skeletal muscle, ADO suffusion induced a concentration-dependent reduction in arteriolar [log(IC50) = −9.8 ± 0.2 M] and venular [log(IC50) = −8.4 ± 0.2 M] PsRSA. RT-PCR and immunoblot analysis demonstrated mRNA and protein expression of ADO A1, A2A, A2B, and A3 receptors in both vessel types, and immunofluorescence assay revealed expression of the four subtype receptors in the microvascular walls (endothelium and smooth muscle). PsRSA responses of arterioles and venules to ADO were blocked by 8-( p-sulphophenyl)theophylline, a nonselective A1 and A2 antagonist. An A2A agonist, CGS21680 , was more potent than the A1 agonist, cyclopentyladenosine, or the most-selective A2B agonist, 5′-( N-ethylcarboxamido)adenosine. The ability of CGS21680 or ADO to reduce PsRSA was abolished by the A2A antagonist, ZM241385. An adenylyl cyclase inhibitor, SQ22536, blocked the permeability response to ADO. In aggregate, these results demonstrate that, in juvenile females (before the production of the reproductive hormones), ADO enhances skeletal muscle arteriole and venule barrier function predominantly via A2A receptors using activation of adenylyl cyclase-signaling mechanisms.


1989 ◽  
Vol 122 (3) ◽  
pp. 697-704 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Hamada ◽  
G. Watanabe ◽  
T. Kokuho ◽  
K. Taya ◽  
S. Sasamoto ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT A sensitive radioimmunoassay (RIA) for the determination of inhibin in peripheral plasma and tissue homogenates of different species has been developed using antisera to partially purified bovine follicular fluid (bFF) inhibin and 125I-labelled bFF 32 kDa inhibin. Antisera were produced by immunization of rabbits with partially purified bFF inhibin prepared by immunoaffinity chromatography. Increasing doses of a high titre antiserum could neutralize the suppressing effect of bFF, porcine follicular fluid and rat ovarian homogenate on FSH secretion from rat anterior pituitary cells in culture. Sensitivity of the assay was 3·1 ng International Research Standard of porcine inhibin per tube. Parallel inhibition curves were obtained for inhibin preparations from female and male animals of ten species, i.e. cattle, goats, sheep, cats, dogs, monkeys, pigs, horses, rats and man. Inhibin subunits and related proteins cross-reacted minimally with the antiserum used in the study. Plasma concentrations of inhibin in adult male and female rats were measured by the RIA before and at various times after gonadectomy. Inhibin levels in peripheral plasma before gonadectomy were significantly higher in adult female than in adult male rats. Inhibin levels decreased abruptly after gonadectomy in both sexes and they correlated negatively with plasma concentrations of FSH. This inhibin RIA will facilitate studies of the physiology of inhibin in various species of animals. Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 122, 697–704


2006 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 1362-1365 ◽  
Author(s):  
I.M. Macrae ◽  
H.V. Carswell

Epidemiological studies point to a beneficial influence of the female reproductive hormones on stroke risk in that women have a lower incidence of stroke prior to the menopause compared with men, but this difference weakens with age and stroke risk in women rises after the menopause. However, recent Women's Health Initiative trials in post-menopausal women report an increased stroke risk on hormone replacement therapy. An influence of gender is also apparent on stroke outcome in animal models: female rats exposed to transient MCA (middle cerebral artery) occlusion sustain less brain damage than age-matched males, with loss of protection following ovariectomy. The major hormone thought to be responsible for beneficial influences on stroke incidence and outcome is oestrogen, and a large preclinical literature now exists where exogenously administered oestrogen has been studied in male and ovariectomized female rats using a range of stroke models and outcome measures. Most of these studies administer oestrogen prior to the stroke, use a model of transient ischaemia followed by reperfusion and report a significant oestrogen-induced neuroprotection. However, in some studies where the MCA is permanently occluded, oestrogen pre-treatment in ovariectomized female rats has been shown to significantly exacerbate ischaemic damage. Therefore preclinical results demonstrate harmful as well as beneficial influences of oestrogen on the ischaemic brain, highlighting the need for further study to elucidate the mechanisms responsible for both detrimental and beneficial influences. Ultimately, this could lead to the development of new classes of oestrogenic compounds with improved risk/benefit profiles, designed to selectively activate pathways inducing only the beneficial effects of oestrogen in vivo.


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (12) ◽  
pp. 1488-1505 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrina M Volk ◽  
Veronika V Pogrebna ◽  
Jackson A Roberts ◽  
Jennifer E Zachry ◽  
Sarah N Blythe ◽  
...  

Abstract Diet-induced obesity has been associated with various metabolic and reproductive disorders, including polycystic ovary syndrome. However, the mechanisms by which obesity influences the reproductive system are still not fully known. Studies have suggested that impairments in hormone signaling are associated with the development of symptoms such as acyclicity and ovarian cysts. However, these studies have often failed to address how these hormonal changes arise and how they might contribute to the progression of reproductive diseases. In the present study, we used a high-fat, high-sugar (HFHS) diet to induce obesity in a female rodent model to determine the changes in critical reproductive hormones that might contribute to the development of irregular estrous cycling and reproductive cycle termination. The HFHS animals exhibited impaired estradiol, progesterone (P4), and luteinizing hormone (LH) surges before ovulation. The HFHS diet also resulted in altered basal levels of testosterone (T) and LH. Furthermore, alterations in the basal P4/T ratio correlated strongly with ovarian cyst formation in HFHS rats. Thus, this model provides a method to assess the underlying etiology of obesity-related reproductive dysfunction and to examine an acyclic reproductive phenotype as it develops.


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