Abstract

Spontaneous luteal regression and prostaglandin-induced luteolysis in bitches were evaluated by measuring the apoptotic index for DNA fragmentation and the relative level of Bax gene expression in ovaries removed from nine untreated nonpregnant bitches at selected times during diestrus and in nine pregnant bitches after 1 day of administering abortive doses of a PGF-analog gel formulation given intravaginally at selected times during gestation. Nonpregnant diestrus was divided into three periods (early, mid and late) based on vaginal cytology and plasma progesterone concentration. Pregnant bitches were treated with a PGF-analog gel at corresponding stages of pregnancy (early, mid and late) and evaluated by ultrasound. Another eight pregnant bitches were similarly studied and serum progesterone concentrations were determined after 1, 2, 3 or 4 days of PGF-analog gel. Corpora lutea obtained by ovariohysterectomy were analyzed for apoptotic internucleosomal DNA fragmentation relative to that in a control cell line (U937), using an apoptotic DNA ladder kit and gel electrophoresis and for relative expression of the pro-apoptotic Bax gene by RT-PCR and electrophoresis. In nonpregnant bitches, the DNA fragmentation apoptotic index was greater in late than in early diestrus ( P < 0.01). The index after 1 day of PGF-analog gel was higher in early pregnant bitches than in early diestrus bitches ( P < 0.05); it was highest in midpregnancy ( P < 0.05). The degree of apoptosis was related to the number of times PGF-analog gel was administered. Bax mRNA was detected in the corpus luteum (CL) and Bax expression increased from early to middiestrus in nonpregnant subjects ( P < 0.05). Potential elevation in Bax due to PGF-analog gel treatment in pregnancy was only significant in relation to normal diestrus during early pregnancy ( P < 0.01). In conclusion, we inferred that the effects of endogenous or exogenous prostaglandin on CL life span in bitches involved increases in apoptotic activity and that increased apoptosis was implicated in normal luteal regression in nonpregnant bitches.

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