INITIATION OF FOLLICULAR MATURATION AND OVULATION AFTER REMOVAL OF THE LITTER FROM THE LACTATING RAT
- 1 December 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Journal of Endocrinology
- Vol. 87 (3) , 393-400
- https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.0870393
Abstract
In order to elucidate the mechanism of the resumption of follicular activity and ovulation in rats, levels of FSH, LH and prolactin in plasma and pituitary gland and ovarian follicular development were quantified after removal of the litter on day 3 of lactation (day of parturition = day 0 of lactation). Such removal resulted in ovulation of 13 oocytes 4 days later, a number comparable with that found in normal cyclic rats. Plasma levels of prolactin were high during lactation but markedly decreased after removal of the litter. Although plasma concentrations of FSH and LH did not change during days 3–7 of lactation, there was an FSH surge between 24 and 30 h after removal of the litter. Plasma concentrations of LH also increased slightly but significantly by 24 h after removal of the litter and this value persisted during the following 2 days. Surges of FSH, LH and prolactin occurred at 17.00 h 3 days after pups were removed. Removal of the litter did not increase pituitary contents of FSH, LH and prolactin and a marked reduction in pituitary levels of FSH and LH, but not of prolactin, occurred at 17 00 h 3 days after removal of the litter. A quantitative study of follicular development indicated that follicles larger than 401 μm in diameter were absent during days 3–7 of lactation. However, the number and size of antral follicles increased by 30 h after removal of the litter, probably due to the increases in plasma levels of FSH and LH, and follicles larger than 601 μm in diameter appeared 3 days after the young were removed. Although ovulation could not be induced by human chorionic gonadotrophin from days 3 to 5 of lactation, its administration 30 h after removal of the litter produced ovulation in all rats by the following morning. These results indicated that a moderate increase in FSH, although below the amounts released at the preovulatory surge, together with basal levels of LH which were within the range observed on the day of dioestrus during the normal cycle were responsible for the initiation of follicular maturation after removal of the litter.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
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