Abstract
Effects of a low dose of estradiol on the luteal function were studied in intact pregnant rats. The pregnant rats received daily s.c. injections of 0.1 .mu.g estradiol or sesame oil from day 7 to 14 of pregnancy (day 1 = day of insemination). Serum progesterone levels on day 15 were significantly lower in the estrogen-treated group than the oil-treated group. In order to study how estrogen induced luteolysis, the pregnant rats received each of the following treatments on day 7 of pregnancy: the uterus, except that containing a single conceptus, was removed by hysterectomy (hysterectomy group); all but a single conceptus were removed by aspiration, so that rats carried only a single conceptus with the whole part of the nongravid uterus (aspiration group). Each group of rats received daily s.c. injections of 0.1 .mu.g estradiol or sesame oil from day 7 to 14 of pregnancy. Estradiol treatment caused a significant decline in serum progesterone levels in the aspiration group on day 15, but this was not the case in the hysterectomy group. There was no significant difference in serum LH [luteinizing hormone] levels among any of the groups on day 15 of pregnancy. Estradiol induced luteolysis in the intact pregnant rats, which would at least in part, the mediated through the uterus.