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Abstract
The mechanisms controlling the initiation and early stages
of follicular growth are poorly understood. Our laboratory
developed a serum-free culture system that supports
spontaneous and wholesale activation of primordial
follicles in pieces of cortex dissected from the ovaries
of fetal calves and fetal baboons. However, very few
follicles activated in vitro progressed to the secondary
stage. To determine whether androgens can promote the
primary to secondary follicle transition, pieces of fetal
bovine ovarian cortex were cultured in serum-free medium
in the absence or presence of testosterone (T,
10-7 and 10-6 M) or estradiol
(E2, 10-6 M) for 10 days. Cortical
pieces were then fixed and embedded in plastic for serial
sectioning and morphometric analysis; fresh cortical
pieces fixed on day 0 served as uncultured controls.
Freshly isolated cortical pieces contained mostly
primordial follicles, whereas after 10 days in vitro, most
primordial follicles had activated, differentiating into
primary follicles as expected. Neither T nor E2
affected the number of primordial and primary follicles
compared with controls (P > 0.05). However, T
(10-7 and 10-6 M) increased the
number of secondary follicles (P < 0.05), whereas
E2 had no effect, suggesting that the effect of
T was not due to conversion of T to E2. In the
second experiment, the optimal concentration of
testosterone for preantral follicle growth was determined.
A range of lower doses of T
(10-10-10-7 M) increased the number
of secondary follicles in cultured cortical pieces in a
dose-dependent manner, with 10-7 M T being most
effective (P < 0.05). In the third experiment,
addition of a specific androgen receptor blocker,
flutamide, inhibited the stimulatory effects of T on the
primary to secondary follicle transition (P < 0.05),
suggesting a receptor-mediated action of T. Localization
of androgen receptors by immunohistochemistry revealed
immunostaining for the androgen receptor in ovarian
stromal cells and increasing immunoreactivity in follicle
cells as follicular development progressed from primordial
and primary to secondary to antral follicles, suggesting
the involvement of androgen receptor in bovine
folliculogenesis. In summary, our results show that T
promotes the growth of bovine follicles activated in vitro
and suggest that its stimulatory effect is mediated
through androgen receptors in the stroma and/or follicular
cells.
Key words:
Ovary
Androgen receptor
Follicle
Follicular development
Testosterone
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