Studies of the luteinization process in the rat: follicular and luteal adenylate cyclase responsiveness to catecholamines
- PMID: 3103359
- DOI: 10.1530/acta.0.1140171
Studies of the luteinization process in the rat: follicular and luteal adenylate cyclase responsiveness to catecholamines
Abstract
The subject of the study was the development of follicular and luteal catecholamine responsiveness during the periovulatory period. Follicles and corpora lutea and granulosa cells were obtained from the PMSG ovulatory model and adenylate cyclase activity measured in membrane fractions. In the earlier part of the follicular phase (48 h and 26 h before ovulation) no response to noradrenalin on follicular and granulosa cell adenylate cyclase activity was seen. A small but significant response to noradrenalin was observed from 18 h before until 3 h after ovulation. The response to noradrenalin on luteal adenylate cyclase activity increased markedly with time and reached a maximum 39-57 h after ovulation. After this time the luteal response to noradrenalin decreased with luteal age. The effect of LH was less than that of noradrenalin during the early luteal phase, and in contrast to noradrenalin, increased with luteal age. The combined effects of LH and noradrenalin were not additive. In order to test whether gonadotropins could induce a noradrenalin response, injections of LH and FSH were given to the animals two days before ovulation. LH, but not FSH, induced a small but significant response to noradrenalin 16 h later. The present investigation has shown that ovarian responsiveness to catecholamines appears in preovulatory follicles followed by a marked increase in luteal catecholamine responsiveness. This development could at least partly occur under the influence of LH.