Assessment of the need for follicle stimulating hormone in early preantral mouse follicle culture in vitro

Abstract
In two consecutive controlled experiments 160 early preantral follicles were cultured in order to evaluate effects of recombinant follicle stimulating hormone (r-FSH) on survival, differentiation, oestradiol and inhibin secretion, cumulus mucification and cumulus-corona-oocyte detachment by human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) stimulation. Nuclear maturation in oocytes was also assessed following addition of HCG. A histological analysis of cultured follicles was carried out on semi-thin sections at various culture stages. Addition of r-FSH was essential for follicle survival for 16 days: without r-FSH only 11% of the follicles survived for 12 days (with r-FSH: 79%) and none of these mucified after the HCG stimulus. r-FSH promoted granulosa cell proliferation and antral-like cavity formation. Without r-FSH, histology of the cultures demonstrated degeneration and reduced granulosa cell proliferation; oestradiol and inhibin production were reduced. This study illustrates the essential role of FSH in promoting the in-vitro growth of early preantral mouse ovarian follicles and in maintaining the oocyte under meiotic arrest.

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