Abstract

The occurrence of pregnancy-associated endometrial alpha 1-globulin (alpha 1-PEG), a 29-32 kd insulin-like growth factor binding protein, now termed type 1 or IGF-bp1, has been examined in the human ovary by monoclonal and polyclonal antibody based radioimmunoassay and immunohistological techniques. Follicular fluids aspirated from 51 follicles of 32 women undergoing hyperstimulation involving buserelin or clomiphene-based protocols contained 35.5-276.0 ng/ml (mean 101.0 mg/ml) of immunoreactive IGF-bp1. Mean fluid concentrations were three times the level of IGF-bp1 detected in paired serum samples, available for 21 women. Immunoreactive IGF-bp1 in follicular fluid exhibited similar dose-response curves to purified protein and amniotic fluid and immunoreactive IGF-bp1 coeluted in gel filtration with a peak of [125I]-IGF-1 binding corresponding to the elution profile of purified IGF-bp1. Gel filtration also revealed the presence in follicular fluid of a greater than 100 kd binding protein with a binding capacity equal to IGF-bp1 under the conditions employed. A highly significant correlation (P less than 0.001) was found between follicular fluid progesterone and IGF-bp1 and a correlation of lower significance was found between oestradiol and IGF-bp1 (P less than 0.05). However, only low levels of immunoreactive IGF-bp1 were detected in supernatant media of granulosa cells in culture (range undetectable to 2.3 ng/ml). Employing monoclonal antibody-based immunohistology, immunoreactive IGF-bp1 was consistently associated with luteinized granulosa cells of corpora lutea rather than paraluteal cells and its intensity of reactivity appeared to reflect luteal phase steroid hormone profiles. No consistent reactivity was detected in preovulatory follicles and granulosa cells in culture, although reactivity was associated with primordial oocytes. Immunoreactive IGF-bp1 was detected in six of nine supernatant media of explants of luteal tissue obtained from five corpora lutea, with levels ranging from undetectable to greater than 200 ng/ml. These observations suggest that IGF-bp1 is primarily related to luteinization of the granulosa and the resultant luteal cells, and if produced by the luteal cells, additional exogenous factors are required to induce production by granulosa cells in vitro.

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