Luteinizing hormone and follicle stimulating hormone induce premature condensation of chromatin in goat (Capra hircus) oocytes
J Kumar, JC Osborn and AW Cameron
Reproduction, Fertility and Development
3(5) 585 - 591
Published: 1991
Abstract
This study tested the hypothesis that premature condensation of chromatin in goat oocytes following superovulation with 1200 i.u. pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin (PMSG) is mediated by the high luteinizing hormone (LH) activity inherent in this gonadotrophin. Goats were treated with either a standard (3.95 mL) or high (7.90 mL) dose of a highly purified follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) preparation (Ovagen), and different doses of human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) were added to increase the level of LH bioactivity during superovulation. The meiotic status of oocytes obtained at sponge withdrawal was compared between different treatments and correlated with profiles of LH bioactivity in peripheral plasma. Injection of 100 i.u. hCG (which gave a plasma LH profile comparable to 1200 i.u. PMSG) or 200 i.u. hCG resulted in significantly more oocytes showing premature condensation of chromatin without germinal vesicle breakdown than with 25 i.u. hCG or treatment with FSH alone. Nevertheless, nuclear maturation was also prematurely activated in a significant number of oocytes with a high dose of FSH alone, even though LH bioactivity was not detected in plasma. It is concluded that high LH bioactivity during superovulation of goats with gonadotrophins activates the initial stages of nuclear maturation in oocytes. However, highly purified FSH preparations in high doses can also induce this apparent abnormality in the timing of oocyte maturation through mechanisms unrelated to any LH contamination.https://doi.org/10.1071/RD9910585
© CSIRO 1991