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Title: A local oxytocin system is part of the luteinization process in the preovulatory follicle of the marmoset monkey (Callithrix jacchus). Author: Einspanier A, Jurdzinski A, Hodges JK. Journal: Biol Reprod; 1997 Jul; 57(1):16-26. PubMed ID: 9209075. Abstract: Luteinization is a complex differentiation process involving the interaction of extrinsic and intraovarian factors. The aim of this study was to examine the components of an intraovarian oxytocin (OT) system during the periovulatory period in the marmoset monkey, as well as the possible relationship of these components to other factors involved in the luteinization process, using immunohistochemistry and cell culture techniques. Ovaries were collected on Day 7 of the follicular phase (before the endogenous LH surge) and on Day 8 (22 h after an exogenous hCG application, but before ovulation). Before the endogenous LH increase, OT immunoreactivity was detectable at low levels in most antral follicles, where its presence was confined to antral granulosa cell (GC) layers. In contrast, immunoreactivity for the OT receptor (OTR) was localized primarily in the basal GC layer. After application of exogenous hCG, there was a marked enhancement in both the staining intensity and the number of cells positive for OT and the OTR in all GC layers of antral follicles, especially in the preovulatory follicle. Progesterone receptor and 3beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity in GC were clearly present only when follicles were obtained after gonadotropin stimulation. Secretion of authentic OT was demonstrated from cultured GC obtained before the LH surge, with highest amounts in cells cultured from preovulatory as opposed to smaller antral follicles. OT production could be stimulated by the application of hCG to the GC cultured from preovulatory follicles, whereas the gonadotropin was without effect on GC from small follicles. FSH had no effect on OT production by GC from either follicle type. Application of OT to the cultures caused an increase in progesterone production by GC from large preovulatory follicles but was without effect on steroidogenesis by cells from small antral follicles. These results describing the presence and distribution of OT and OTR and their modulation by hCG, as well as the luteotrophic effect of OT in cultured GC from preovulatory follicles, implicate OT as a paracrine mediator in the luteinization process in the primate ovary.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]