The time-course of oxytocin secretion from cultured bovine granulosa cells, stimulated by ascorbate and catecholamines
- 1 February 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Journal of Endocrinology
- Vol. 116 (2) , 247-258
- https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.1160247
Abstract
Bovine granulosa cells secrete oxytocin when cultured in a serum-supplemented medium. The time-course of secretion is similar to that in the early corpus luteum in vivo, with a delay of 1 to 2 days followed by a peak and decline over the first 5 days of culture. We have investigated the basis of this time-course in vitro and studied the temporal characteristics of the stimulatory actions of ascorbic acid and adrenaline on this process. Cells cultured on stirred microcarriers showed a similar pattern of secretion of oxytocin to those cultured on conventional flat plates, despite continuing and rapid mitosis. This indicated that the secretion profile in conventional culture was not an artifact related to the cessation of mitosis. Furthermore, secretion of oxytocin and progesterone by cells on microcarriers was stimulated without a corresponding change in mitotic rate, showing that the secretion per cell had been increased. In conventional culture, addition of ascorbic acid to culture media (0·5 mmol/l) increased the secretion of oxytocin (up to 4·5-fold) but only if ascorbic acid was present during the first day of culture. The cells showed a progressive refractoriness to stimulation after 12 h. Since the time-course of secretion was unaltered by treatment, this resulted in a delay of 1 to 2 days before the action of the ascorbate was seen. The secretion of progesterone was similarly affected but with less stimulation and less consistency. In contrast, cells treated with adrenaline (10 μmol/l) secreted more oxytocin on the day of treatment and did so at any time during culture provided that there was sufficient basal secretion of hormone. Adrenaline also failed to alter the time-course of secretion but treated cells showed a persistent response, maintaining enhanced secretion for up to 3 days after the adrenaline had been removed. Ascorbate and adrenaline were highly synergistic in their effects, provided that the ascorbate was present from the start of culture; the response to adrenaline strongly reflected the degree of ascorbate stimulation. We conclude that granulosa cells secrete oxytocin according to an inherent time-schedule and that there is a limited period during which they can respond to ascorbate. Since ascorbate is required for the biosynthesis of oxytocin, this suggests that the availability of ascorbate during corpus luteum formation may determine the amount of oxytocin which can be released subsequently in response to catecholamines. J. Endocr. (1988) 116, 247–258This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
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