Abstract

The effects of estradiol on luteal estrogen receptor and steroidogenesis were examined on Days 9 through 11 of pseudopregnancy. In normal pseudopregnant rabbits, unoccupied cytoplasmic and total nuclear estrogen receptor were 2.6 +/- 0.4 fmol/microgram DNA and 0.4 +/- 0.1 fmol/microgram DNA, respectively, on Day 10 of pseudopregnancy. An i.v. injection of 4 micrograms of estradiol caused the translocation of cytoplasmic receptor and a 6.6-fold increment in total nuclear receptor within 15 min, which was followed by rapid processing of the nuclear receptor. Both cytoplasmic and nuclear estrogen receptor returned to normal values within 24 h, and during this period, serum progesterone did not change significantly. Withdrawal of an estradiol implant from animals on Day 9 of pseudopregnancy initiated a marked decline in serum progesterone within 24 h. Following an injection of saline or of 4 micrograms estradiol on Day 10, unoccupied cytoplasmic estrogen receptor in saline- and estradiol-injected rabbits was 1.0 +/- 0.1 fmol/microgram DNA and 1.9 +/- 0.1 fmol/microgram DNA, respectively, on Day 11 of pseudopregnancy. Associated with the increase in cytoplasmic receptor there was an increase in serum progesterone (8.2 +/- 1.5 ng/ml), in contrast to saline-injected animals in which serum progesterone continued to decline (1.6 +/- 0.4 ng/ml). Despite the significant differences in cytoplasmic receptor and in progesterone synthesis, total nuclear estrogen receptor was not different in these animals. These data suggest that in corpora lutea already secreting progesterone at high rates during midpseudopregnancy, the rapid translocation of available estrogen receptor does not cause further stimulation of progesterone synthesis. However, if steroidogenesis is first reduced experimentally, then an injection of 4 micrograms of estradiol can readily stimulate progesterone synthesis, and this stimulation is associated with an increase in cytoplasmic receptor.

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