Abstract

The role of extracellular Ca2+ in progesterone-induced fibronectin production and deposition by hen granulosa cells was studied. Granulosa cells isolated from preovulatory follicles of the chicken ovary were incubated in Ca(2+)-deficient or Ca(2+)-containing medium 199, and the amount of total fibronectin produced (fibronectin deposited in the matrix, secreted into the medium, or associated with cells) was measured by ELISA. The quantity of fibronectin deposited as well as the total amount of fibronectin produced in the presence or absence of exogenous progesterone was suppressed in Ca(2+)-deficient medium. It required greater concentrations of exogenous progesterone to significantly increase fibronectin production in Ca(2+)-deficient medium than in Ca(2+)-replete medium. Cyanoketone, an inhibitor of progesterone synthesis, suppressed total fibronectin produced by unstimulated cells both in the absence and presence of Ca2+. However, the inhibitory effect of cyanoketone was significantly less in Ca(2+)-replete medium than in Ca(2+)-deficient medium. Exogenous progesterone reversed completely the inhibitory effects of cyanoketone. In the presence of cyanoketone, progesterone caused a greater (3-fold) increase in fibronectin production in Ca(2+)-replete medium than in the absence of Ca2+. Thapsigargin, an agent that mobilizes Ca2+ from internal stores, suppressed basal and progesterone-induced fibronectin production in the absence and presence of cyanoketone. However, the inhibitory effect of thapsigargin was significantly reduced in Ca(2+)-replete medium.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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