Abstract

To evaluate the role of nonsteroidal, follicular fluid proteins in folliculogenesis, the 10-55% saturated ammonium sulfate fraction of pooled human follicular fluid was dialyzed against 0.025 M Tris/HCl (pH 7.5) using 10,000 molecular weight exclusion membranes, then passed through agarose immobilized textile dye. Activity was determined by test fraction inhibition of human menopausal gonadotropin (2 U human LH/FSH . day), induced ovarian weight, and serum estradiol increase in hypophysectomized, diethylstilbesterol-treated, 25-day-old female rats. Specific inhibition (89 +/- 6.8% SEM) of ovarian weight increase was found in the material (2 ml) eluted from an Orange A column with KCl (1.5 M, pH 6.8). Inhibitory activity of the Orange A-bound material, which eluted through a standardized Sephadex G-50 column, corresponded to a molecular weight of 13,000-25,000. Isoelectric focusing on a Sephadex G-15 support bed or ampholyte displacement chromatography of Orange A bound material demonstrated inhibitory activity at pH 3.5-4.5 and 6.5-7.0. No demonstrable activity was found in similar fractions eluted through a Concanavalin A-Sepharose 4B column before or after addition of alpha-methyl-D-mannoside (2 M, pH 7). When active fractions were heated (56 C, 1 h) or exposed to trypsin (10 mg/100 ml), activity was lost. When aliquots of the saturated ammonium sulfate-extracted, dialyzed, Orange A-bound eluent were separated by high performance liquid chromatography using gel exclusion columns, activity in the bioassay was recovered in the 13,000-35,000 molecular weight range. Although confirmatory data await further studies, it is tempting to speculate that this protein(s) may be an important inter- and/or intraovarian regulator of follicular response to gonadotropins.

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