UTERINE SECRETION OF PROSTAGLANDIN-F2-ALPHA STIMULATED BY DIFFERENT DOSES OF OXYTOCIN AND RELEASED SPONTANEOUSLY DURING LUTEOLYSIS IN CATTLE

Citation
J. Kotwica et al., UTERINE SECRETION OF PROSTAGLANDIN-F2-ALPHA STIMULATED BY DIFFERENT DOSES OF OXYTOCIN AND RELEASED SPONTANEOUSLY DURING LUTEOLYSIS IN CATTLE, Reproduction, nutrition, development (1989), 38(3), 1998, pp. 217-226
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology,"Nutrition & Dietetics","Reproductive Biology","Developmental Biology
ISSN journal
09265287
Volume
38
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
217 - 226
Database
ISI
SICI code
0926-5287(1998)38:3<217:USOPSB>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The objectives were to determine the involvement of oxytocin (OT) in t he stimulation of prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF) secretion during luteol ysis in cattle. On days 16-17 of the oestrous cycle, catheters were in serted into the aorta abdominalis of heifers for OT or saline infusion and into the jugular vein for blood sample collection. The following day, heifers were assigned to one of three experimental groups (Gr): G r I - 10 IU OT (n = 4); Gr II - 20 IU OT (n = 4); Gr III - 50 IU OT (n = 4). Blood samples were collected every 10 min during a 1-h control period before treatment and every 5-10 min for 2 h after OT treatment. In Gr IV (n = 5), a catheter was inserted into the jugular vein on da y 15 of the cycle and blood samples were collected every 15 min for 12 h on days 16-19. Plasma concentrations of progesterone, PGF metabolit e, 13, 14-dihydro-15-keto-prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGFM) and OT were de termined. Within 5 min of infusion of 10 or 20 IU OT, peripheral conce ntrations of OT (7-12 pg/mL) increased by about 200 and 350-500 pg/mL, respectively. These doses did not affect plasma concentrations of PGF M or progesterone within 1.5 h. Fifty IU of OT increased its maximal p eripheral concentration to 1 500 pg/mL, which is over 20 times greater than that observed physiologically. Concentrations of plasma PGFM in Gr III increased from basal concentrations (50-65 pg/mL) to 150-250 pg /mL (P < 0.01) within 10-30 min. During luteolysis, PGFM pulses ranged between 250 and 600 pg/mL on days 16-19 of the cycle (Gr IV), whereas coincident pulses of OT, and those appearing between spikes of PGFM, were never above 75 pg/mL. Only 50 % of OT pulses coincided with pulse s of PGFM, and 54 % of PGFM pulses coincided with a pulse of OT. Resul ts indicate that luteolytic PGF secretion in cattle is not directly de pendent upon ovarian OT. (C) Inra/Elsevier, Paris.