Abstract

Abstract. LH exerts a biphasic effect on rat follicular steroidogenesis: an initial general stimulation of steroidogenesis later followed by an inhibition of androgen and oestrogen synthesis. It is known that the stimulation by LH of steroidogenesis is mediated by cAMP. The present paper examines the role of cAMP in the late inhibitory phase of steroidogenesis. Pre-ovulatory follicles were isolated from PMSG treated immature rats and incubated in modified bicarbonate buffer for different time periods. The accumulation of progesterone (P), androstenedione (A), testosterone (T) and oestradiol-17β (E2) in the medium was measured. Addition of dibutyryl cAMP (dbcAMP, 1 mm) to the medium caused a prolonged increase in P accumulation for 10 h while A and E2 accumulation was stimulated only for 4–6 h whereafter the levels were sustained. The pattern was identical to that produced by LH (10 μg/ml) in vitro. In a second type of experiments follicles were pre-incubated for 6 h with or without LH or dbcAMP and then transferred for a second 2 h incubation, in the presence or absence of unlabelled 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP) or T (1 μg/ml). Follicles pre-incubated in plain medium increased their formation of A and T in the presence of 17-OHP, while follicles exposed to LH or dbcAMP did not. Addition of T caused a similar increase in E2 formation in all groups (control, LH and dbcAMP). It is concluded that since dbcAMP mimicked the entire response of follicular steroidogenesis normally elicited by LH, cAMP seems to be the physiologic mediator of LH, both on the early stimulatory and on the late inhibitory phase of pre-ovulatory follicular steroidogenesis.

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