info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Participation of the extrinsic cholinergic innervation in the action of nitric oxide on the ovarian steroidogenesis in the first proestrous in rats
Fecha
2016-09Registro en:
Delsouc, María Belén; Morales, Laura Daniela; Vallcaneras, Sandra; Bronzi, Cynthia Daniela; Anzulovich Miranda, Ana Cecilia; et al.; Participation of the extrinsic cholinergic innervation in the action of nitric oxide on the ovarian steroidogenesis in the first proestrous in rats; Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science; General and Comparative Endocrinology; 236; 9-2016; 54-62
0016-6480
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Delsouc, María Belén
Morales, Laura Daniela
Vallcaneras, Sandra
Bronzi, Cynthia Daniela
Anzulovich Miranda, Ana Cecilia
Delgado, Silvia Marcela
Casais, Marilina
Resumen
An ex-vivo Coeliac Ganglion-Superior Ovarian Nerve-Ovary (CG-SON-O) system and an ovary without peripheral neural influence from virgin rats in the first proestrous were used to test whether ovarian extrinsic innervation and nitric oxide (NO) affects steroidogenesis in the ovary. The CG and the ovary were placed in separate buffered-compartments, connected by the SON. Stimulation of the CG was achieved by 10−6 M acetylcholine (Ach). The ovary without peripheral neural influence was placed alone in a buffered-compartment. To test a possible role of NO in the ovarian response to peripheral neural influence, 100 μM sodium nitroprusside (SNP, an NO donor) and 100 μM NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, an inhibitor of NO synthase) were added to the ovarian compartment separately. In the CG-SON-O system, SNP into the ovarian compartment increased the concentration of NO, reduced the release of progesterone and increased the release of estradiol (E2), increasing the mRNAs related to their synthesis enzyme. The addition of L-NAME to the ovarian compartment caused an opposite effect. In the ovary alone, NO manifested an antisteroidogenic effect on both hormones. These results show that the ovarian extrinsic innervation maintains a direct relationship between NO and E2, both needed at high levels during the follicular phase, allowing the continuity of the estrous cycle.