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SHUJI SASAMOTO
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TSUYOSHI OTANI
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MARIKO SHIROTA
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When bovine follicular fluid (BFF) was given i.p. three times at intervals of 3 h from 17.00 to 23.00 h to dioestrous rats pretreated with 10 i.u. human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) at 17.00 h on the day of dioestrus (day 0), the selective surge of FSH at 02.00 h on day 1 was suppressed in a dose-dependent manner. Three i.p. injections of 0·5 ml BFF completely suppressed the FSH rise in plasma at 02.00 h on day 1, but the time of premature ovulation induced by HCG was not altered. In these animals treated with HCG and BFF, however, the selective surge of FSH occurred as a delayed surge from 05.00 to 23.00 h on day 1. After seven i.p. injections of 0·5 ml BFF (from 17.00 h on day 0 to 11.00 h on day 1) the delayed surge of FSH took place from 17.00 h on day 1 to 11.00 h on day 2, indicating that waning of BFF with a decrease in inhibin secretion by the ovaries may be responsible for the delay of the FSH surge.

The next spontaneous ovulation in rats treated with HCG and BFF occurred on day 5, a delay of ovulation of 1 day compared with animals given HCG on day 0 with no BFF. Initiation of follicular maturation or selection of growing follicles for the succeeding oestrous cycle appeared to be retarded by the delay of the FSH surge in HCG- and BFF-treated animals.

The pituitary content of FSH in animals given HCG and three i.p. injections of 0·5 ml BFF increased strikingly until 11.00 h on day 1, when the delayed FSH surge was already in progress. These results suggest that the ability of the pituitary gland to synthesize FSH is high during the period of ovulation.

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Osamu Mizuno
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Tsuyoshi Otani
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Mariko Shirota
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Shuji Sasamoto
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The present investigation was performed to elucidate the mechanism of the initiation of follicular maturation after inhibition of ovulation in rats treated with pentobarbitone sodium at 13.30 h and progesterone at 14.00 h on the day of pro-oestrus (day 0 denotes the day of these treatments). Ovulation was completely inhibited and the next spontaneous ovulation occurred on day 5, the expected day of the next oestrus. Follicular responsiveness to injection of human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) indicated that preovulatory follicles at the time of treatment with pentobarbitone and progesterone regressed by 05.00 h on day 2. Maturation of a new set of follicles began from 17.00 h on day 2 and all rats were induced to ovulate by hCG injection by 17.00 h on day 3, the number of oocytes ovulated being comparable to normal ovulation.

In the animals receiving pentobarbitone sodium and progesterone treatment, two selective rises in plasma FSH, which had peak levels at 05.00 h on day 1 and 11.00 h on day 2, were observed without a rise in LH. Preovulatory surges of FSH and LH occurred on the afternoon of day 4.

These results suggest that the second rise in FSH was induced by regression of Graafian follicles present at the time of treatment with pentobarbitone sodium and progesterone and that this surge of FSH was responsible for initiation of maturation of a new set of follicles destined to ovulate in the subsequent cycle. The mechanism of induction and the role of the first rise of FSH from the night of day 0 to the morning of day 1 cannot be explained at present.

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