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31 January 2022 Endometrial and luteal responses to a prostaglandin F2alpha pulse: a comparison between heifers and mares
Rafael R. Domingues, O.J. Ginther, Victor Gomez-Leon, Thadeu Castro, Milo C. Wiltbank
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Abstract

In heifers and mares, multiple pulses of prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF) are generally associated with complete luteal regression. Although PGF pulses occur before and during luteolysis, little is known about the role of minor PGF pulses during preluteolysis on subsequent luteal and endometrial PGF production that may initiate luteolysis. Heifers (n = 7/group) and mares (n = 6/group) were treated with a single minor dose of PGF (3.0 and 0.5 mg, respectively) during mid-luteal phase (12 and 10 days postovulation respectively). After treatment, a transient decrease in progesterone (P4) concentrations occurred in heifers between Hours 0 and 2 but at Hour 4 P4 was not different from pretreatment. In mares, P4 was unaltered between Hours 0 and 4. Concentrations of P4 decreased in both species by Hour 24 and complete luteolysis occurred in mares by Hour 48. Luteal and endometrial gene expression were evaluated 4 h posttreatment. In heifers, luteal mRNA abundance of PGF receptor and PGF dehydrogenase was decreased, while PTGS2, PGF transporter, and oxytocin receptor were increased. In the heifer endometrium, receptors for oxytocin, P4, and estradiol were upregulated. In mares, luteal expression of PGF receptor was decreased, while PGF transporter and oxytocin receptor were increased. The decrease in P4 between Hours 4 and 24 and changes in gene expression were consistent with upregulation of endogenous synthesis of PGF. The hypotheses were supported that a single minor PGF treatment upregulates endogenous machinery for PGF synthesis in heifers and mares stimulating endogenous PGF synthesis through distinct regulatory mechanisms in heifers and mares.

Summary Sentence

A minor PGF pulse causes a transient decrease in P4 in heifers but not in mares and upregulates endogenous machinery for PGF synthesis in both species through distinct endometrial, luteal, and hormonal responses to PGF.

Graphical Abstract

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© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for the Study of Reproduction. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com
Rafael R. Domingues, O.J. Ginther, Victor Gomez-Leon, Thadeu Castro, and Milo C. Wiltbank "Endometrial and luteal responses to a prostaglandin F2alpha pulse: a comparison between heifers and mares," Biology of Reproduction 106(5), 979-991, (31 January 2022). https://doi.org/10.1093/biolre/ioac025
Received: 30 August 2021; Accepted: 25 January 2022; Published: 31 January 2022
KEYWORDS
corpus luteum
luteolysis
oxytocin receptor
prostaglandin receptor
prostaglandin transporter
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