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  • Title: Luteinization of bovine granulosa cells and corpus luteum formation associated with loss of androgen-aromatizing ability.
    Author: Henderson KM, Moon YS.
    Journal: J Reprod Fertil; 1979 May; 56(1):89-97. PubMed ID: 469864.
    Abstract:
    The relative aromatizing ability of bovine luteinizing granulosa cells and dispersed luteal cells in tissue culture was studied. Luteinization of granulosa cells, as indicated by steadily increasing progesterone production (from 50 to 300 ng/10(5) cells/day over 4--5 days), was accompanied by a dramatic reduction in their capacity to aromatize exogenous androgen; oestradiol-17 beta production falling from 200 to less than 10 ng/10(5) cells/day over 4--5 days. Luteal cells also had only a very limited capacity to aromatize exogenous androgen, maximum oestradiol-17 beta production being less than 600 pg/10(5) cells/day. The loss in aromatizing capacity of granulosa cells during luteinization was also reflected in the relative endogenous steroid content of non-luteinized granulosa cells and luteal tissue, the former containing high levels of oestradiol-17 beta, less than or equal to 28 ng/mg protein, while the latter, although containing substantial amounts of testosterone, less than or equal to 5.7 ng/g tissue, contained very little oestradiol-17 beta, less than or equal to 0.35 ngG TISSUE. These findings suggest that luteinization of bovine granulosa cells and subsequent corpus luteum formation is associated with a loss in androgen aromatase activity.
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