Locally produced androgens and oestrogens are thought to be important factors in the hormonal regulation of follicular development. In the present study the relationship between follicular maturity and granulosa cell aromatase activity has been examined in vitro. Granulosa cells harvested from the largest antral follicles in adult rat ovaries produced negligible amounts of immunoreactive oestradiol when incubated for 3 h in vitro irrespective of the day of the oestrous cycle upon which they were obtained. However, the addition of aromatizable C19 steroid substrate (testosterone, androstenedione or 19-hydroxyandrostenedione) to the incubation medium resulted in time- and concentration-dependent increases in oestradiol production which were related to the level of follicular maturity attained in vivo. By measuring oestradiol production using testosterone (10−7 mol/l) as substrate, the aromatase activity of granulosa cells obtained on the first day of vaginal dioestrus was shown to be only a fraction (less than 5%) of that observed for cells obtained on the morning of pro-oestrus. Cells obtained on the second day of dioestrus displayed an intermediate level of activity which remained approximately five times lower than that of granulosa cells at pro-oestrus. These observations, therefore, establish the induction or activation of granulosa cell aromatase activity as a correlate of normal preovulatory follicular development. However, intrafollicular androgen/oestrogen ratios may also be influenced by quantitative and/or qualitative alterations in the C19 steroidal substrate available for the aromatase reaction. Thus, the naturally occurring non-aromatizable 5α-reduced androgen metabolites, 5α-dihydrotestosterone and 5α-androstanedione, proved to be potent competitive inhibitors of the granulosa cell aromatase reaction in vitro. In this respect each of these biologically active androgens was more effective than 1-enetestololactone, an established C19 steroidal aromatase inhibitor. Since C19 steroid 5α-reductase is known to be an ovarian enzyme, it is suggested that by affecting the androgenic/oestrogenic composition of the hormonal milieu, local alterations in the activity of this enzyme may be an additional determinant of preovulatory follicular development and function.
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