Abstract

Prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha)-induced release of ovarian oxytocin was investigated to determine whether the effect in vivo was local. [3H]PGF2 alpha infused downstream into a single ovarian lymphatic was transferred into the adjacent ovarian vasculature (estimated transfer 1.1 and 1.7%, two experiments). When unlabelled PGF2 alpha was infused in a similar manner (76 pmol min-1), there was a prompt eightfold increase in ovarian oxytocin release from the adjacent ovary containing a corpus luteum, but no effect on the opposite corpus luteum, showing that the effect was local. Instillation of 2% lignocaine into the ovarian vascular pedicle did not affect PGF2 alpha-induced oxytocin release, supporting the idea that neural mechanisms are not involved. Repeated doses of PGF2 alpha given close-arterially produced a successive reduction in oxytocin release. This effect was prevented by a prior infusion of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), which itself gave a small, but significant, increase in oxytocin release. The results show that PGF2 alpha in ovarian lymphatics acts locally and directly to stimulate ovarian oxytocin secretion, that repeated exposure of the corpus luteum to pulses of PGF2 alpha can result in tachyphylaxis, and that this latter effect can be ameliorated by IGF-I infused in vivo.

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