Abstract

The concentration of prostaglandin F in utero-ovarian venous plasma and progesterone in jugular venous plasma were determined by radioimmunoassay in 3 cows over the last 2–3 weeks of gestation. Utero-ovarian prostaglandin F concentrations did not show any consistent pattern in two of three cows until 48–72 h before term when the levels rose sharply from 1 ng/ml to a maximum 4–9 ng/ml during labour. The concentration of progesterone in jugular venous plasma tended to fall gradually over the last 20 days of gestation with a further fall occurring 48-36 h before delivery. In two other cows at around 240 days of gestation the concentration of plasma progesterone in ovarian venous plasma was 50 to 150 times the concentration of progesterone in uterine or jugular venous plasma. It is concluded from these results that the ovaries are the major source of progesterone in cows during late pregnancy. The findings also suggest that prostaglandin F may be the luteolytic factor responsible for the sharp decline in plasma progesterone concentrations over the last 48-36 h preceding parturition.

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