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Journal of Endocrinology (1975) 64, 329-336    DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.0640329
© 1975 Society for Endocrinology

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PLASMA PROGESTERONE AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO SERUM GONADOTROPHINS IN IMMATURE FEMALE RATS

H. M. A. MEIJS-ROELOFS, W. J. DE GREEF and J.TH.J. UILENBROEK

In immature female rats, low values for concentrations of plasma progesterone were generally found from days 6–15 and from days 25–32 of life. Maximum progesterone concentrations (13·0–14·1 ng/ml), comparable to metoestrous values in the adult rat, occurred on days 20–22. The progesterone appeared to be of ovarian origin since after ovariectomy, on day 18, low progesterone concentrations were found 1 and 2 days later (2·5 ng/ml and 1·3 ng/ml) as compared with control values of 10·7 ng/ml and 14·1 ng/ml. However, adrenalectomy also lowered progesterone concentrations, 1 and 2 days later (6·4 and 4·9 ng/ml).

The effect of progesterone, either alone or in combination with oestradiol benzoate (OB), on serum gonadotrophins was studied in rats ovariectomized on day 18. The highest dose of progesterone (0·15 mg) only slightly diminished the rise in serum luteinizing hormone (LH) after ovariectomy and had no effect on serum follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH).

Oestradiol benzoate in a dose of 0·025 µg/100 g body weight was highly effective in preventing the rise in both LH and FSH concentrations, and OB treatment (resulting in a near-physiological oestradiol concentration) combined with progesterone treatment was more effective than treatment with OB alone.

The results suggest that the amounts of progesterone and oestradiol present in the 20-day-old rat are adequate to cause the decrease in FSH level normally observed in immature female rats around this age.




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