Abstract
SUMMARY: The secretion rates of oestradiol, androstenedione and progesterone and the peripheral plasma concentration of LH were measured in 12 ewes with ovarian autotransplants before and after luteal regression induced by a single intramuscular injection of a synthetic prostaglandin (PG) analogue, 16-aryloxyprostaglandin F (I.C.I. 80996). Luteal regression was followed by a fourfold rise in the basal concentration of LH and increased secretion of oestradiol. In five out of six ewes there was a discharge of LH with the peak occurring 36–78 h after the injection of the PG analogue. The secretion of oestradiol declined from 3·68± 1·08 to 0·33± 0·6 (s.e.m.) ng/min in the 24 h following the LH peak (P < 0·001). In the remaining six ewes in which progesterone was implanted subcutaneously 24 h after the injection of PG analogue, follicular development was suppressed as indicated by the low secretion of oestradiol and androstenedione. The basal concentration of LH fell to values similar to those observed during the luteal phase after the implant of progesterone. The secretion of androstenedione followed a similar pattern to that of oestradiol in those ewes which showed presumptive evidence of ovulation. These results suggest that progesterone reinforces the negative feedback effects of oestrogen in the ewe.