Oxytocin in mares: lack of evidence for oxytocin production by or action on preovulatory follicles.
Abstract: It is not known whether the equine preovulatory follicle produces oxytocin or is a target tissue for oxytocin, as has been reported for other species, especially ruminants. Bovine granulosa cells secrete oxytocin, and oxytocin modulates the production of progesterone by granulosa cells in vitro. We examined whether oxytocin plays a comparable role in the equine preovulatory follicle. To test the hypothesis that the equine preovulatory follicle produces oxytocin during estrus and that its production increases in late estrus, preovulatory follicles were isolated during early (Days 1 to 2; n = 4) and late (Days 4 to 5; n = 4) estrus. Granulosa cells, pieces of theca interna and pieces of follicle wall (theca with attached granulosa cells) were cultured for 3 d with or without equine gonadotropins. Culture media were collected, replaced at 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hr of culture, and assayed for oxytocin. Granulosa cells from preovulatory follicles secreted negligible amounts of oxytocin during 3 d of culture, irrespective of gonadotropin treatment or stage of estrus. Likewise, negligible amounts of oxytocin were measured in theca and follicle wall cultures at both developmental stages, in the presence or absence of gonadotropins. Furthermore, follicular fluid from early or late estrous follicles contained only negligible amounts of oxytocin. To determine if oxytocin affects steroidogenesis by equine granulosa cells, granulosa cells from follicles obtained on Day 2 of estrus were cultured with graded doses of oxytocin (0, 1, 10, 100, and 1,000 ng/ml) in defined medium supplemented with testosterone (0.5 microM) and culture media were assayed for estradiol-17 beta and progesterone. Estradiol was secreted throughout the culture period, and its production was not significantly affected by oxytocin treatment (P > 0.05). Progesterone secretion was relatively low during the first 24 hr of culture, increased dramatically on the second day of culture, and remained high through the third day. No dose of oxytocin had a significant effect on progesterone secretion (P > 0.05). In conclusion, the results indicate that equine preovulatory follicles, isolated during early or late estrus, are neither a source of oxytocin nor a target for oxytocin action on steroidogenesis. Although ovarian oxytocin appears to play a role in regulating follicular function in some other mammalian species, our data provide no support for such a role for oxytocin in mares.
Publication Date: 1995-04-01 PubMed ID: 7600764DOI: 10.1016/0739-7240(94)00015-sGoogle Scholar: Lookup
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- Journal Article
- Research Support
- Non-U.S. Gov't
Summary
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This research examines the role of oxytocin in mare ovulation. Contrary to other species, it finds no evidence that the equine preovulatory follicle produces oxytocin or that oxytocin affects the production of key sex hormones by those cells.
Background and Objective
- It remains uncertain whether the equine preovulatory follicle, the follicle that releases the egg in female horses, produces a hormone called oxytocin.
- Oxytocin, in some species, particularly ruminants, is produced by granulosa cells of follicles and helps in the production of progesterone.
- This study set out to investigate if oxytocin plays a similar role in horse’s follicles.
Methodology
- Preovulatory follicles were isolated from mares during both the early and late stages of the estrus cycle.
- The granulosa cells from these follicles were cultured with or without equine gonadotropins, which are hormones that regulate reproduction.
- The culture media used in these experiments was periodically replaced and tested for the presence of oxytocin at various time intervals.
- Additionally, researchers studied whether oxytocin affects the production of sex hormones estradiol-17 beta and progesterone by these granulosa cells. Different doses of oxytocin were cultured with these cells and hormone levels were measured.
Results & Conclusion
- They found negligible quantities of oxytocin produced by the granulosa cells, regardless of whether they were treated with gonadotropins.`,
- No significant amounts of oxytocin were detected in the theca (the follicle’s outer layer) and follicular fluid during any stage of estrus.
- Moreover, the researchers found that oxytocin levels did not significantly affect the production of estradiol or progesterone.
- Based on their findings, the researchers concluded that ovaries in mares are neither a source of oxytocin nor a target of its action during ovulation.
- This suggests that, unlike in some mammals, oxytocin doesn’t play a regulatory role in the functionality of the ovarian follicles in mares.
Cite This Article
APA
Stock AE, Emeny RT, Sirois J, Fortune JE.
(1995).
Oxytocin in mares: lack of evidence for oxytocin production by or action on preovulatory follicles.
Domest Anim Endocrinol, 12(2), 133-142.
https://doi.org/10.1016/0739-7240(94)00015-s Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department and Section of Physiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Cells, Cultured
- Estradiol / analysis
- Estradiol / metabolism
- Estrus / metabolism
- Estrus / physiology
- Female
- Follicular Fluid / chemistry
- Granulosa Cells / chemistry
- Granulosa Cells / cytology
- Granulosa Cells / metabolism
- Horses / metabolism
- Luteinizing Hormone / blood
- Ovarian Follicle / cytology
- Ovarian Follicle / metabolism
- Ovarian Follicle / physiology
- Ovulation / metabolism
- Ovulation / physiology
- Oxytocin / analysis
- Oxytocin / biosynthesis
- Oxytocin / pharmacology
- Progesterone / analysis
- Progesterone / metabolism
- Testosterone / pharmacology
- Time Factors
Citations
This article has been cited 1 times.- Newcombe JR, Cuervo-Arango J, Wilsher S. The Timing of the Maternal Recognition of Pregnancy Is Specific to Individual Mares. Animals (Basel) 2023 May 22;13(10).
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