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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 33, 53-59, Copyright © 1985 by Society for the Study of Reproduction


ARTICLES

Metabolism of progesterone by hamster blastocysts and the ontogeny of progesterone metabolic capability

JT Wu

Progesterone (P) is required for the differentiation of reproductive tracts and maintenance of pregnancy. This study investigates whether the hamster blastocyst is capable of metabolizing P and, if so, at what stage of preimplantation development such capability becomes detectable. When the blastocysts collected from superovulated hamsters on Day 4 of pregnancy were cultured in 0.4 microM P medium, P metabolism was easily detectable at 1.25 h of culture and over half was metabolized by 7.5 h. Two major metabolites were generated: 5 alpha- pregnane-3,20-dione (or 5 alpha-dihydroprogesterone; 5 alpha-DHP) and 5 alpha-pregnane-3 beta-ol-20-one (or allopregnanolone; AP), about 90-95% and 5-10%, respectively. This indicates the activity of two enzymes: delta 4-5 alpha-reductase and 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3 beta-HSD). The rate of P metabolism increased with P concentration (0.4- 6.4 microM), indicating a high capacity of the enzymes. Studies of embryos collected on Days 1-3 showed that P metabolism was not detectable up to 0100 h of Day 3 (2-4-cell), but was detectable with two metabolites, 5 alpha-DHP and AP, at 1515 h of Day 3 (morula) and thereafter. This indicates that, by the morula stage, the hamster embryo has already acquired the enzymatic capability (5 alpha-reductase and 3 beta-HSD) to metabolize P. These results, together with our earlier finding of 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity in Days 1-4 embryos, suggest that hamster preimplantation embryos can metabolize both P and estrogens, thus possibly modulating local actions of these hormones and causing local effects in the reproductive tract.





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Copyright © 1985 by the Society for the Study of Reproduction.