Abstract
The following aspects of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH)-follicular relationships were studied in heifers: (1) the role of the decline in circulating levels of FSH in selection of a dominant follicle of a follicular wave; (2) the relationship of an FSH nadir (low levels between surges) to the absence of development of new follicles of a detectable diameter during the interim between the emergence of successive waves. A recombinant DNA-derived bovine FSH was used. Administration of bovine follicle-stimulating hormone (bFSH) for two days before the time of selection of the dominant follicle of the first post-ovulatory follicular wave delayed the time of divergence of the follicles into dominant and subordinates (first significant divergence: bFSH treatment before selection, Day 4.0; bFSH treatment after selection, Day 2.5; controls, Day 2.5: ovulation, Day 0). Significantly greater growth of the first and second largest subordinates occurred in the pre-selection group. A superovulatory dose of bFSH for 4 days with PGF 2α-induction of luteolysis resulted in multiple ovulations when begun on Day 1 (before the expected time of follicle divergence; mean 2.8 ovulations per heifer) than when begun on Day 5 (after divergence; mean 1.0 ovulation per heifer). Administration of bFSH during the expected time (Days 5 and 6) of an FSH nadir did not alter the day of detectable emergence of the next follicular wave. Results supported the following hypotheses: (1) a decline in the wave-stimulating FSH surge is an integral component of the selection mechanism that results in the divergence into dominant and subordinate follicles; (2) the nadir between FSH surges does not account directly for the absence of the development of new follicles between the emergence of waves.
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