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Journal of Reproduction and Fertility (1986) 78 167-183
DOI: 10.1530/jrf.0.0780167
Copyright © 1986 Society for Reproduction and Fertility
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A combined radioimmunoassay and immunocytochemical study of ovarian oxytocin production during the periovulatory period in the ewe

D. C. Wathes, S. E. F. Guldenaar, R. W. Swann, R. Webb, D. G. Porter and B. T. Pickering

Summary. Corpora lutea and follicles were taken from the ovaries of 12 ewes at intervals from the start of luteolysis until 3 days after ovulation. RIA analysis of the tissue oxytocin content showed that luteal oxytocin concentrations declined during luteolysis to reach basal values at about the time of the next ovulation. Oxytocin was first measurable in the walls of 3 out of 6 preovulatory follicles during the LH surge, with a small increase in concentration to 26·1 ± 6·6 pg/mg before ovulation, and a further increase in the young corpus luteum to concentrations exceeding 1 ng/mg 2–3 days later. After the LH surge, oxytocin was also found in the follicular fluid at a concentration of 3·4 ± 0·3 ng/ml. Using immunocytochemical techniques, oxytocin and neurophysin were first detected in the follicle wall immediately before ovulation, and were localized in the granulosa cells. After ovulation the stained cells initially formed strands which appeared to break down to clusters and then to individual cells as the corpus luteum matured. The immunocytochemical picture also sugested that neurophysin immunoreactivity increased within a few hours of ovulation but that processing to oxytocin may be delayed. Measurements of circulating oxytocin concentrations revealed a pulsatile release pattern throughout the follicular phase with the height of the pulses decreasing from 25 ± 5 pg/ml during luteolysis to a minimum of 11 ± 2 pg/ml during the LH surge.




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M. Elmes, L. R. Green, K. Poore, J. Newman, D. Burrage, D. R. E. Abayasekara, Z. Cheng, M. A. Hanson, and D. C. Wathes
Raised dietary n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid intake increases 2-series prostaglandin production during labour in the ewe
J. Physiol., January 15, 2005; 562(2): 583 - 592.
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Copyright © 1986 by the Society for Reproduction and Fertility.