Pentobarbitone-blocked pro-oestrous rats were subjected to either limited mating (maximum of 30 mounts), all-night cohabitation with males or stimulation of the vagina and cervix with a glass rod (2 or 5 min) to determine which type of stimulus was most effective in inducing ovulation. All-night cohabitation was the most successful procedure and resulted in 100% ovulation in those rats which mated. Treatment with either phenoxybenzamine, propranolol or pimozide did not interfere with this copulation-induced ovulation whereas methysergide treatment completely blocked copulation-induced ovulation. Administration of atropine resulted in a loss of mating behaviour and these animals therefore did not ovulate. Further experiments provided evidence that administration of atropine also blocked ovulation in response to vaginal stimulation with a glass rod. Pretreatment with methysergide or atropine had no effect upon the percentage of pentobarbitone-blocked, pro-oestrous rats ovulating in response to administration of LH releasing hormone (LHRH). However, those rats given atropine shed significantly fewer ova per rat following LHRH or LH infusion when compared with controls. These results suggest that the synaptic mechanisms responsible for mediating copulation-induced ovulation are different from those mediating steroid-induced ovulation, and that ovarian cholinergic receptors may play a role in ovulation.
J. Endocr. (1984) 100, 361–365
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