Abstract

Immature rats were injected with pregnant mares' serum gonadotrophin followed by human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG). Ovaries were removed 0, 2, 5 or 8 days after hCG and either prepared for morphometric analysis or perifused with 0, 5 or 30 ng luteinizing hormone (LH)/min. In a second study, ovaries were removed on Day 2 or 8 and perifused with 0.1 mg 8-br-cyclic adenosine 5'-phosphate/ml (8-br-cAMP). On Day 0, the granulosa cells of the preovulatory follicles were small (53 +/- 0.5 microns2) with a cytoplasmic to nuclear (Cy:Nu) ratio less than or equal to 1.5. By Day 2, corpora lutea (CL) were present and composed of 95% small luteal cells (diameter less than 125 microns2, Cy:Nu greater than or equal to 3.0) and 5% large luteal cells (diameter greater than 125 microns2, Cy:Nu ratio greater than or equal to 3.0). The percentage of large luteal cells increased to 36 +/- 7% by Day 5, suggesting that they are derived from a select population of small luteal cells. Basal progesterone secretion increased from 38 +/- 5 on Day 0 to 1010 +/- 48 pg/mg/ml on Day 8. The rate of 5 ng LH/min stimulated progesterone secretion on Days 0, 2 and 8; 30 ng LH/min stimulated progesterone secretion on Days 0, 2 and 8, but not on Day 5; 8-br-cAMP stimulated progesterone secretion on both Days 2 and 8. These data demonstrate that once granulosa cells are induced to luteinize they lose their capacity to secrete progesterone in response to 5 ng LH/min and do not regain their responsiveness to LH rate until they completely differentiate. The loss of this LH responsiveness appears to be due to an inability to stimulate sufficient intracellular cAMP concentrations, since cAMP stimulates progesterone secretion on both Days 2 and 8.

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