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Physiological Reviews, Vol. 80, No. 1, January 2000, pp. 1-29
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Animal Reproduction and Biotechnology Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Historical Perspective
B. General Actions of Progesterone
II. DEVELOPMENT OF THE CORPUS LUTEUM
III. LUTEAL STEROIDOGENIC PATHWAY
A. Steroidogenic Substrates
B. Transport of Cholesterol
C. Conversion of Cholesterol to Progesterone
IV. TROPIC REGULATION OF LUTEAL FUNCTION
A. Luteal Development
B. Chronic Regulation of Luteal Function by Pituitary Hormones: Luteal Maintenance
C. Requirements for Pulsatile Release of LH for Normal Luteal Function
D. Role of Estrogens in Luteal Function
E. Acute Control of Progesterone Secretion
F. Mechanisms by Which Luteotropic Hormones Increase Secretion of Progesterone From Luteal Cells
V. LUTEOLYSIS
A. Blood Flow and Vascular Changes
B. Morphological Changes
C. Intracellular Signaling
D. Luteal PGF2
E. PGF2Inhibition of Progesterone Synthesis
F. Negative Regulation of Progesterone in Small Luteal Cells
G. Immune-Mediated Events
H. Apoptosis
I. Oxidative Stress
VI. MATERNAL RECOGNITION OF PREGNANCY
A. General Considerations
B. Maternal Recognition of Pregnancy in Ruminants
C. Maternal Recognition of Pregnancy in Rodents
D. Maternal Recognition of Pregnancy in Primates and Equids
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ABSTRACT |
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Niswender, Gordon D.,
Jennifer L. Juengel,
Patrick J. Silva,
M. Keith Rollyson, and
Eric W. McIntush.
Mechanisms Controlling the Function and Life Span of the
Corpus Luteum. Physiol. Rev. 80: 1-29, 2000.
The primary function of the
corpus luteum is secretion of the hormone progesterone, which is
required for maintenance of normal pregnancy in mammals. The corpus
luteum develops from residual follicular granulosal and thecal cells
after ovulation. Luteinizing hormone (LH) from the anterior pituitary
is important for normal development and function of the corpus luteum
in most mammals, although growth hormone, prolactin, and estradiol also
play a role in several species. The mature corpus luteum is composed of
at least two steroidogenic cell types based on morphological and
biochemical criteria and on the follicular source of origin. Small
luteal cells appear to be of thecal cell origin and respond to LH with
increased secretion of progesterone. LH directly stimulates the
secretion of progesterone from small luteal cells via activation of the
protein kinase A second messenger pathway. Large luteal cells are of
granulosal cell origin and contain receptors for PGF2
and appear to mediate the luteolytic actions of this hormone. If
pregnancy does not occur, the corpus luteum must regress to allow
follicular growth and ovulation and the reproductive cycle begins
again. Luteal regression is initiated by PGF2
of uterine
origin in most subprimate species. The role played by
PGF2
in primates remains controversial. In primates, if PGF2
plays a role in luteolysis, it appears to be of
ovarian origin. The antisteroidogenic effects of PGF2
appear to be mediated by the protein kinase C second messenger pathway,
whereas loss of luteal cells appears to follow an influx of calcium,
activation of endonucleases, and an apoptotic form of cell death. If
the female becomes pregnant, continued secretion of progesterone from the corpus luteum is required to provide an appropriate uterine environment for maintenance of pregnancy. The mechanisms whereby the
pregnant uterus signals the corpus luteum that a conceptus is present
varies from secretion of a chorionic gonadotropin (primates and
equids), to secretion of an antiluteolytic factor (domestic ruminants),
and to a neuroendocrine reflex arc that modifies the secretory patterns
of hormones from the anterior pituitary (most rodents).
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I. INTRODUCTION |
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A. Historical Perspective
Corpora (bodies) lutea (yellow) were named by Marcello Malpighi (1628-1694) and first accurately described by Regnier de Graaf (1641-1673) who noted that after coitus "globular bodies" appeared on the ovary of rabbits and remained there until after parturition. De Graaf also observed that the number of corpora lutea was related to the number of offspring that animals "bring forth" (as cited by Short, Ref. 332). That the corpus luteum might produce substances that regulate pregnancy was suggested by Prenant (293) after examining the histology of corpora lutea and concluding that "there can be no doubt ... it (the corpus luteum) acts as a gland, and as a gland of internal secretion..." Subsequently, Prenant's conclusion was confirmed when it was shown that removing the ovaries or corpora lutea from pregnant rabbits resulted in abortion or resorption of the embryos (112, 113, 208). After these experiments, Magnus (208) suggested treating pregnant, ovariectomized rabbits with luteal extracts to study the biologically active factor produced by corpora lutea. Thereafter, the luteal factor was crystallized and characterized virtually simultaneously by four independent groups (7, 49, 142, 339). This factor, which proved to be a steroid hormone, was named progesterone.
B. General Actions of Progesterone
Although the focus of this review is regulation of the synthesis and secretion of progesterone by the corpus luteum, a brief introduction regarding the biological actions of this important reproductive hormone is merited. The principal targets of progesterone are the reproductive tract and the hypothalamo-pituitary axis. In general, the actions of progesterone on the reproductive tract are to prepare it for initiation and maintenance of pregnancy. Progesterone appears to exert most of its effects by directly regulating transcription of genes through specific nuclear receptors that act as ligand-inducible transcription factors (reviewed in Moutsatsou and Sekeris, Ref. 239). Upon ligand binding, these receptors modulate expression of genes by binding specific progesterone-responsive elements on the DNA. Previous exposure to estrogens, which induces the production of receptors for progesterone (167, 182, 192), is required for progesterone to act on the reproductive tract. In contrast, progesterone downregulates receptors for estradiol (46, 94, 168, 383) and thereby blocks many of the actions of estrogens that generally act as mitogenic factors. An example of the antiestrogenic effects of progesterone is in the oviduct where progesterone blocks estradiol-inducible secretory proteins (375) and induces deciliation and cessation of secretory activity of the oviductal epithelium (45, 46, 322).
In the uterus, progesterone acts on the endometrium as a differentiation factor (70). During the follicular phase, estrogens induce proliferation of cells of the endometrium, and elevated concentrations of progesterone during the luteal phase of the reproductive cycle inhibit mitosis in the endometrium (269). Progesterone also induces stromal differentiation, stimulates glandular secretions in association with the accumulation of basal vacuoles in the glandular epithelium (216), and changes the pattern of proteins secreted by endometrial cells (216, 355). These uterine proteins provide an environment that supports early embryonic development.
In the uterus, progesterone induces quiescence of the myometrium. This
effect appears to be manifested in an increased resting potential and
prevention of electrical coupling between myometrial cells
(273). In addition, progesterone decreases uptake of
extracellular calcium that is required for contraction of myometrial
cells (26) by downregulating expression of genes that
encode subunits of voltage-dependent calcium channels
(362). Progesterone also prevents uterine contractions by
blocking the ability of estradiol to induce
-adrenergic receptors,
activation of which causes contractions (37).
Finally, the length of reproductive cycles is also governed, in part,
by progesterone. Circulating concentrations of progesterone are low
during the follicular phase. During this time, rising concentrations of
estradiol act on the hypothalamus and pituitary to stimulate
low-amplitude, high-frequency pulses of luteinizing hormone (LH),
which result in elevated circulating concentrations of LH that drive
follicular development to the point of ovulation (reviewed in Lucy et
al., Ref. 205). After ovulation, as the corpus luteum develops, high
circulating concentrations of progesterone restrict secretion of LH to
low-frequency, high-amplitude pulses that result in reduced mean
concentrations of LH. This effect of progesterone is the result of
actions on both the hypothalamus and pituitary. Progesterone blocks
surges of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) from the
hypothalamus (17, 183). In the pituitary, progesterone reduces the number of receptors for GnRH
(198) by downregulating mRNA encoding the receptor for
GnRH (27). In addition, progesterone decreases the amount
of LH released in response to GnRH (170), in part as a
result of the reduced number of receptors for GnRH in the pituitary.
High levels of progesterone also result in decreased expression of the
genes encoding the
-subunits of both LH (42) and
follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) (42,
87) and the common
-subunit of the gonadotropins (18, 42, 87). These effects of
progesterone on secretion of gonadotropins appear to be dependent on
the total endocrine environment because, in some instances,
progesterone can facilitate surges of gonadotropins induced by
estradiol (17, 27, 40, 41, 193).
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II. DEVELOPMENT OF THE CORPUS LUTEUM |
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This review of the mechanisms that control luteal function focuses on domestic ruminants, and data from the ewe are provided for continuity in essentially all areas of discussion. Data from additional species are included where appropriate. A second area of focus is the control of the secretion of progesterone at the molecular level, again with particular emphasis on the ewe.
The preovulatory surge of gonadotropins induces ovulation and
differentiation of residual follicular cells that form the corpus luteum and begin to produce progesterone at high rates. Before this,
estradiol is the primary steroid secreted by the ovary. Granulosal and
thecal cells of the follicle coordinately produce estrogens (reviewed
in Refs. 24, 111). Thecal cells express the enzymes necessary to
convert cholesterol to androgens but lack the enzymes necessary to
convert androgens to estradiol (reviewed in Bao and Garverick, Ref.
24). Conversely, granulosal cells produce progesterone but are unable
to convert pregnenolone or progesterone to androgens. However,
granulosal cells can convert androgens to estradiol. Thus thecal
cell-produced androgens are aromatized to estradiol by granulosal
cells. Estradiol is important as a mitogen and stimulates the division
of granulosal cells (306). The preovulatory LH surge
results in luteinization of granulosal and thecal cells and alters the
steroidogenic pathway so that progesterone is the primary steroid
hormone produced by each of these cell types after luteinization.
However, the corpus luteum of several species, including humans, pigs,
and rats, retains the ability to produce some estradiol (reviewed in
Refs. 305, 393, 394). Synthesis of progesterone is the least complex
steroidogenic pathway in the ovary (Fig.
1). Differentiation into cells capable of
producing progesterone at high rates is accomplished by increased expression of enzymes necessary for conversion of cholesterol to
progesterone, i.e., cholesterol side-chain cleavage cytochrome P-450 complex (P-450scc) and
3
-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase/
5,
4
isomerase (3
-HSD), and decreased expression of the enzymes that convert progesterone to estrogens, i.e., 17
-hydroxylase cytochrome P-450 and aromatase cytochrome P-450 (reviewed in
Bao and Garverick, Ref. 24).
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Theca- and granulosa-derived luteal cells give rise to two distinct types of luteal cells that differ morphologically and physiologically. In most nonprimate mammals, the cells derived predominantly from granulosal cells have been designated as large luteal cells (LLC), and those from thecal cells have been designated small luteal cells (SLC). The primate analogs of LLC and SLC are referred to as granulosa-lutein and theca-lutein cells, respectively (254). Differences in the morphological and biochemical characteristics of these cell types, including differences among species, are detailed in section IV. In addition to steroidogenic cells, the corpus luteum contains endothelial cells, fibroblasts, pericytes, and cells originating from the bloodstream (59, 60).
The degree of migration and intermixing of follicular-derived cells during formation of the corpus luteum differs among species. In primates, migration and intermixing are less extensive than in other species. Granulosa-lutein cells remain separated from theca-lutein cells, and some of the follicular basement membrane appears to remain and form a barrier between granulosa-lutein and theca-lutein cells (132). In contrast, follicular tissue is extensively reorganized during migration of thecal cells, fibroblasts, and endothelial cells during development of the corpus luteum of most nonprimate mammals (254). In these species, the cells of the corpus luteum are intermixed to the extent that LLC, SLC, fibroblast, and endothelial cells are in close proximity to one another (Fig. 2; Refs. 84, 99).
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A profound aspect of early luteal development is the rate of tissue growth and cellular proliferation during this time. In sheep, ovulatory follicular tissue that weighs ~40 mg develops into a corpus luteum that weighs 600-700 mg in just a few days (99, 169). This growth is the result of an approximately twofold increase in the size of LLC, whose numbers remain constant (~15 × 106/corpus luteum in sheep), and an increase in the number of SLC, fibroblasts, and endothelial cells (99). From days 4 to 16 of the ovine estrous cycle, the number of fibroblasts approximately doubles (from 21 to 50 × 106), whereas the number of SLC increases 5-fold (from 10 to 50 × 106) and the number of endothelial cells increases ~6.5-fold (from 18 to 120 × 106; Ref. 99). Proliferation of cells in the developing corpus luteum results in a mitotic rate that is equal to that of rapidly growing tumors (169). The factors regulating proliferation of SLC and fibroblasts are not well characterized but may involve fibroblast growth factors (300), growth hormone (GH; Ref. 179), and LH (129). Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a mitogen specific for endothelial cells (102), is probably a primary regulator of proliferation of luteal endothelial cells early in the cycle (29). Luteinizing hormone or human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) induces expression of VEGF by preovulatory follicles and isolated granulosal cells (116, 188), and immunoneutralization of VEGF abolishes mitogenic activity of endothelial cells in developing corpora lutea (89).
Proliferation of endothelial cells is requisite for the
neovascularization during luteal development that results in the corpus luteum's extensive capillary network (300,
304). Capillary lumina account for 22% of the total
volume of the corpus luteum (84), which is consistent with
a rate of blood flow (6-10 ml·g
1·min
1)
to the corpus luteum that exceeds that of other tissues. In addition,
most membranes of luteal cells are either directly adjacent to
capillaries (59%) or adjacent to the interstitial space (37%) in
close proximity to capillaries (84). Such juxtapositioning of luteal cells to capillaries provides for the high metabolic demands
of corpora lutea, which consume two to six times more oxygen per unit
weight than does the liver, kidney, or heart (357).
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III. LUTEAL STEROIDOGENIC PATHWAY |
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A. Steroidogenic Substrates
The substrate for steroidogenesis is cholesterol (Fig. 1). Under normal conditions, the majority of cholesterol is synthesized in the liver (194) and transported to steroidogenic tissues such as the adrenal cortex, follicle, corpus luteum, and testis in the form of lipoproteins. Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) are the most common sources of cholesterol for the production of steroid hormones by the corpus luteum (165, 261, 277). There appears to be some species differences in their preference for LDL or HDL, but either source can be utilized by luteal cells of most species. Interestingly, in sheep, maximal stimulation of progesterone secretion by lipoprotein correlates well with normal levels of HDL or LDL in serum (387). In addition, under conditions of lipid deprivation (reduced lipoprotein synthesis or in most in vitro conditions), luteal cells are capable of synthesizing cholesterol from acetate (67, 68, 181). However, under normal conditions, the vast majority of cholesterol used for steroidogenesis is obtained from the bloodstream in the form of LDL or HDL.
The uptake of LDL by luteal cells occurs by receptor-mediated endocytosis (47). This pathway is quite efficient, since each LDL molecule contains ~2,500 cholesterol molecules. Once internalized, the endosomes combine with lysosomes where the LDL dissociates from the receptor and is broken down making free cholesterol available to the cell. The LDL receptor is recycled or degraded (reviewed in Grummer and Carroll, Ref. 130). Uptake of extracellular HDL occurs after binding to a plasma membrane-bound HDL binding protein, and cholesterol is transported into the cell by an undefined mechanism that does not appear to be receptor-mediated endocytosis (reviewed in Lestavel and Fruchart, Ref. 201).
Once free cholesterol is present in the cytosol of the cell, it can be used for steroidogenesis or formation of cell membranes, or it can be esterified with fatty acids to form cholesterol esters by cholesterol ester synthetase and stored (reviewed in Johnson et al., Ref. 172). The cholesterol esters often form lipid droplets that have long been used as a morphological characteristic of steroidogenic cell types. Cholesterol esterase hydrolyzes the stored cholesterol esters and provides free cholesterol for use by the cell. This is one of the first steps in steroidogenesis that is acutely controlled by second messenger pathways. Cholesterol esterase is activated when phosphorylated by protein kinase A (PKA) (51, 286, 367).
B. Transport of Cholesterol
Synthesis of all steroids is dependent on transport of cholesterol to the mitochondria and then from the outer to the inner mitochondrial membrane where the cholesterol side-chain cleavage enzyme complex cleaves the side chain from cholesterol to form pregnenolone (354). The first step in this process, transport to the outer mitochondrial membrane, appears to require an intact cytoskeleton, since inhibitors of both microtubule and microfilament (69) function prevent mitochondrial accumulation of cholesterol. The phosphorylation status of cytoskeletal proteins likely influences the rate of steroid transport. Sterol binding proteins also appear to play a role in the transport of cholesterol to the mitochondria (166; reviewed in Scallen et al., Ref. 323). Stimulation of steroidogenesis by tropic hormones enhances transportation of cholesterol to mitochondria, which appears to be a complicated process that is not explained by simple diffusion of cholesterol through the cytoplasm.
The rate-limiting step in the steroidogenic pathway appears to be transport of cholesterol from the outer to the inner mitochondrial membrane (349). This step also appears to be the primary site of acute positive and negative regulation of steroidogenesis by second messenger systems (337). It has been known for at least three decades that stimulation of the steroidogenic pathway by tropic hormones requires the synthesis of a short-lived protein. A breakthrough recently occurred when two proteins of similar size (30,000 Mr) were identified whose synthesis was associated with increased steroid production in several tissues after hormonal stimulation (195, 289, 290, 350, 351). Phosphorylation of these proteins was associated with further increases in steroid secretion (92, 289). The proteins localized to mitochondria and were generated by posttranslational modifications of a protein of 37,000 Mr that contained a mitochondrial targeting sequence (64, 353). This protein, named steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR), was cleaved to acidic and basic 30,000 Mr forms during insertion into the mitochondrial membrane. It was hypothesized that it was during insertion of these proteins into the mitochondrial membrane that cholesterol was transported to the enzyme complex that cleaves the side chain from cholesterol to form pregnenolone (381). However, more recent evidence obtained by truncation of the StAR gene to delete the mitochondrial targeting sequence suggests that cholesterol transport also occurred with the mutated protein (12, 378). Therefore, the role of the mitochondrial targeting sequence in cholesterol transport is unclear. The critical role played by StAR in steroidogenesis was clearly documented by Lin et al. (203), who demonstrated that the severely reduced adrenal and gonadal steroid synthesis seen in patients with congenital lipoid adrenal hyperplasia was due to naturally occurring mutations in the StAR gene.
Recently, the peripheral-type benzodiazepine receptor, which is present in the membranes of mitochondria in steroid-producing cells, has also been shown to play a role in transport of cholesterol (271). Targeted deletion of the gene for this receptor from cells that constitutively produce steroids results in a dramatic reduction in steroid secretion, which is reversed if the receptors are reintroduced into the cells (270). It has also been shown that normal levels of the endogenous ligand for this receptor are required for a normal steroidogenic response to hCG (38). Thus StAR, mitochondrial benzodiazepine receptors, and the endogenous ligand for this receptor all appear to be required for normal transport of cholesterol from the outer to the inner mitochondrial membrane, the site of cholesterol side-chain cleavage.
C. Conversion of Cholesterol to Progesterone
Once transported to the mitochondrial matrix, the actions of
P-450scc, adrenodoxin, and adrenodoxin reductase
cleave the side chain from cholesterol to form pregnenolone
(354). Pregnenolone is then transported to the smooth
endoplasmic reticulum, which is usually closely associated with
mitochondria, where 3
-HSD converts pregnenolone to progesterone
(reviewed in Hanukoglu, Ref. 140). Progesterone is then thought to
diffuse from the cell. There is no evidence that progesterone can be
stored in high quantities in luteal tissue.
Although progesterone is the primary steroid hormone secreted by the
corpus luteum, depending on species and reproductive state, additional
steroids may be secreted in significant quantities. For example,
corpora lutea of cattle secrete 20
-hydroxy, preg 4-ene, 3-one, and
20
-hydroxy, preg 4-ene, 3-one is secreted by corpora lutea of many
species late in the luteal phase of the estrous cycle. In addition,
estrogens are produced and secreted by primate corpora lutea during the
luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (50).
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IV. TROPIC REGULATION OF LUTEAL FUNCTION |
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Luteotropic hormones are those that support the growth and/or function of the corpus luteum. During a normal luteal phase, the corpus luteum increases in size and ability to secrete progesterone (Fig. 3). Once the corpus luteum has obtained it mature size and reached its maximal potential for secretion of progesterone, luteal function is maintained for a few to several days depending on the species, and then if the animal does not become pregnant, luteal regression must occur to allow reovulation and another chance for pregnancy to occur.
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Concentrations of progesterone in serum are dependent on the amount of
steroidogenic tissue, blood flow, and capacity of the steroidogenic
tissue to synthesize progesterone. The amount of steroidogenic tissue
is dependent on number, as well as size, of steroidogenic luteal cells,
both of which increase during luteal development (Fig. 3). Blood flow
to the corpus luteum also increases as concentrations of progesterone
in serum increase. Increases in concentrations of progesterone in serum
are also associated with changes in concentrations of mRNA-encoding
components of the luteal regulatory and/or steroidogenic pathway.
Figure 3 depicts steady-state concentrations of mRNA encoding
receptors for HDL, LDL, LH, PGF2
, and GH as well as
insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I during development (days
3 and 6), maintenance (days 9 and
12), and early regression (day 15) for the ovine
corpus luteum. These are thought to be the key receptors that regulate
cholesterol uptake or mediate the positive and negative effects of
hormones on luteal secretion of progesterone. Figure 3 also contains
data regarding mRNA concentrations encoding the major steroidogenic proteins, StAR, P-450scc, and 3
-HSD, during
the same stages of luteal function. Although serum concentrations of
progesterone increase as much as 25-fold and luteal weights increase
4-fold, there are no dramatic changes (more than 2-fold) in
steady-state concentrations of any of the mRNA species except that
encoding the receptor for LH, which increases 5-fold. However, if total mRNA per corpus luteum were calculated for any of the components of the
steroidogenic pathway, there would be dramatic increases for all mRNA
species. It is important to point out that it is the concentration of
each species of mRNA within an individual cell that is the key to
controlling concentrations of important regulatory proteins such as
receptors and enzymes and therefore is the key to regulation of the
steroidogenic activities of that cell. Thus steroidogenic capacity of
individual luteal cells, along with their ability to respond to the
luteotropic hormone LH, increases during luteal development.
Many experimental approaches have been used to delineate the hormones necessary for normal luteal function. These have included classical ablation/replacement experiments, specific neutralization of a particular hormone with antibodies, suppression of secretion of a hormone with pharmacological agents, and the use of hormone-specific antagonists. In addition, examination of the effects of specific hormones on progesterone production from isolated luteal cells has allowed identification of potential luteotropic substances and given us further insight as to how luteotropic hormones may regulate progesterone secretion. Hormones that support the growth and/or function of the corpus luteum are termed luteotropic hormones and include LH, GH, prolactin, IGF-I, oxytocin, PGE2, and PGI2.
A. Luteal Development
The importance of hormones secreted by the pituitary gland for
normal luteal development and function has been demonstrated in many
species (15, 81, 100,
164, 343, 348,
374). For continuity, much of this discussion focuses on
the role of the pituitary in regulating luteal function in ewes. If the
pituitary is removed on day 5 of the estrous cycle, the
corpus luteum does not continue to increase in weight, and
concentrations of progesterone in serum remain at or below levels
observed on day 5 (100, 179). This
loss of luteal weight, when compared with that in intact control ewes,
is associated with a decrease in the number of SLC and fibroblasts and
a decrease in the size of both small and large steroidogenic luteal
cells (100). The decrease in amount of progesterone in
serum does not appear to be associated with decreased uptake of
lipoproteins as concentrations of mRNA encoding LDL-receptor (R) or
the HDL-binding protein (BP), and presumably their proteins, are
not decreased (360). However, removal of the pituitary is followed by reduced levels of mRNA encoding the steroidogenic proteins
StAR, P-450scc, and 3
-HSD (177,
179). The decrease in the number and size of steroidogenic
cells and the decreased capacity for steroidogenic cells to synthesize
progesterone result in reduced ability of the corpus luteum to secrete progesterone.
Hypophysectomy removes all pituitary hormones from the circulation;
however, in the ewe, physiological replacement of LH and GH is adequate
to support normal luteal development. Physiological (pulsatile)
replacement of LH in the ewe hypophysectomized during luteal
development supports normal progesterone secretion and normal levels of
mRNA encoding StAR, P-450scc, and 3
-HSD;
however, luteal weights remain lower than in control animals
(100, 177, 179). The failure to
attain normal luteal weights is likely due to fewer nonsteroidogenic
cells because the number and size of steroidogenic cells is not
different from those observed in control ewes. Treatment of
hypophysectomized ewes with GH alone also allows circulating
concentrations of progesterone and expression of mRNA encoding StAR and
P-450scc to reach normal levels; however, GH does not appear to support luteal expression of mRNA encoding 3
-HSD
(177, 179). Replacement of GH in
hypophysectomized ewes increases luteal weights over those in
untreated, hypophysectomized ewes, but not to the size observed in
pituitary-intact control ewes (179). Only when both LH
and GH were replaced in hypophysectomized ewes did all parameters of
luteal function measured increase to levels that were indistinguishable
from pituitary-intact control ewes. Thus both LH and GH are
necessary for normal luteal development and function in ewes.
B. Chronic Regulation of Luteal Function by Pituitary Hormones: Luteal Maintenance
After the corpus luteum is fully formed in the ewe, removal of the
pituitary results in regression of the corpus luteum (79, 81, 144). Although results from early studies
suggest a role for prolactin in maintaining corpora lutea in
hypophysectomized/hysterectomized ewes (81), suppression
of prolactin secretion by ergocryptin does not affect luteal function
in normally cycling ewes or cows (154, 250)
or in pituitary-stalk disconnected (253) or
hypophysectomized ewes that had been treated with LH
(100). Thus prolactin does not appear to be essential for
normal luteal function during the estrous cycle in cows and ewes. In
contrast, in ewes, cattle, and pregnant but not cycling swine,
treatment with antisera against LH caused a decline in luteal weight
and/or luteal content of progesterone (115,
302, 343, 348). However, in
ewes, the effects of removal of all pituitary hormones by
hypophysectomy had a more severe effect on luteal function than did
specific removal of LH with antiserum (144). Both
treatments resulted in a decrease in concentrations of mRNA encoding
StAR, P-450scc, and 3
-HSD (144).
Whether this occurred before the decrease in concentrations of
progesterone in sera was not determined. However, it seems clear that
LH is required to maintain normal expression of mRNA, and presumably
proteins, encoding StAR, P-450scc, and 3
-HSD. Thus both LH and GH appear to be necessary for normal development of
the corpus luteum and for maintenance of the function of the mature
corpus luteum in sheep.
A critical role for LH in supporting progesterone secretion in primates
has also been demonstrated (135, 164,
374). Treatment of monkeys with a potent GnRH antagonist
causes a dramatic decrease in concentrations of progesterone in serum,
which was associated with decreases in mRNA encoding the steroidogenic
enzymes P-450scc and 3
-HSD
(297). Therefore, expression of mRNA encoding proteins important for steroidogenesis, and presumably the proteins themselves, is dependent on LH.
C. Requirements for Pulsatile Release of LH for Normal Luteal Function
Luteinizing hormone is released from the pituitary gland in a pulsatile manner; however, whether the pulsatile profile of LH was essential for normal luteal development and function was unclear. The use of a GnRH antagonist, which obliterates pulsatile, but not basal, release of LH, has allowed researchers to address this question. In primates, administration of a GnRH antagonist prevents normal luteal development (114) and causes a rapid decline in secretion of progesterone from mature corpora lutea (136, 297, 382). However, in early studies in women who had undergone hypophysectomy, progesterone secretion could be maintained with a single, large dose of hCG (374). However, this result is difficult to interpret due to the prolonged circulating half-life of hCG. In cattle, treatment with GnRH antagonist during luteal development impairs normal function of the corpus luteum, indicating that pulsatile release of LH is necessary for this process (283). However, the effect on secretion of progesterone is not as dramatic as that observed in primates, and treatment of cows with a GnRH antagonist after the corpus luteum is fully developed had no effect on secretion of progesterone (283). Treatment of sheep during development or maintenance of the corpus luteum with GnRH antagonist had very little effect on the secretion of progesterone (225). Thus pulsatile release of LH appears necessary for normal luteal function in primates and for luteal development in cows. However, pulses of LH did not appear necessary for luteal development in ewes or maintenance of progesterone secretion in cows or ewes. Thus, although LH is luteotropic in most mammals, the requirement for pulsatile secretion of LH to support secretion of progesterone varies greatly. It should be pointed out that treatments that reduce pulsatile secretion of LH also reduce the average concentrations of LH; thus these data need to be interpreted with care.
D. Role of Estrogens in Luteal Function
In some species, such as the rat, rabbit, and pig, estrogens are
luteotropic. However, the dependence of the corpus luteum on estradiol
for support varies in these species. In the rabbit, removal of
estradiol causes cessation of progesterone secretion; thus estradiol is
considered the primary luteotropic hormone. In this species, LH plays a
secondary role, that of stimulating estradiol synthesis in follicles
(reviewed in Holt, Ref. 155). Similarly, in the rat, estradiol appears
to be directly involved in stimulation of progesterone secretion.
Although both prolactin and LH are necessary for luteal function in the
rat, their roles are secondary. Prolactin is essential to maintain
expression of estradiol and LH receptors, and LH stimulates synthesis
of estradiol from the corpus luteum (reviewed in Gibori et al., Ref.
119). In both rats and rabbits, estrogens also stimulate, directly or indirectly, hypertrophy of luteal cells seen during pregnancy (reviewed
in Refs. 119, 155). In the pig, the luteotropic role of estrogen is
less defined. Implantation of estradiol capsules into the corpus luteum
results in growth of the corpus luteum and increased progesterone
secretion (65). Estradiol also reduces secretion of
PGF2
from the uterus, thus preventing luteolysis which
may account for some of the effects of estradiol in the pig
(110).
Another potential mechanism whereby luteotropic hormones could support
luteal function is decreased expression of receptors for the luteolytic
hormone PGF2
. However, LH appears to upregulate expression of mRNA encoding the PGF2
-R
(180, 371), and hypophysectomy during the
midluteal phase does not affect luteal concentrations of this mRNA
(144). Thus luteotropic hormones do not appear to support
luteal function by suppressing receptors for PGF2
.
E. Acute Control of Progesterone Secretion
The ability of hormones to acutely (within minutes to hours) increase secretion of progesterone in luteal tissues has been examined in vitro as well as in vivo. In vitro studies have utilized cultures of minced luteal tissue, dissociated luteal cells, and/or isolated cell types. The most critical information has been obtained from studies that evaluated steroidogenesis in the two separate types of steroidogenic cells present in corpora lutea from all species examined (reviewed in Niswender and Nett, Ref. 254). Small and LLC differ in their basal rates of secretion of progesterone, with LLC producing 2- to 40-fold more progesterone then unstimulated SLC. The two luteal cell types also differ in their response to different hormonal and/or second messenger stimuli (reviewed in Ref. 254).
1. Acute effects of LH on progesterone secretion
Because of the primary role LH plays in luteal development and
function, its role and mechanisms of action in acute stimulation of
progesterone secretion from luteal cells have been examined. In the ewe
(161, 310), cow (6), human
(260), and pig (361), physiological
concentrations of LH increase secretion of progesterone from SLC, but
not LLC (Fig. 4), although in the ewe and
the cow it has been shown that both cell types contain receptors for LH (62, 141). In ovine and bovine luteal tissues
or cells, binding of LH to its receptor activates adenylate cyclase,
leading to increased concentrations of cAMP and ultimately activation
of PKA (74, 161, 213).
Activation of PKA in SLC slightly increases release of cholesterol from
cholesterol esters (386) but does not influence
concentrations of mRNA or the activity of
P-450scc or 3
-HSD (30,
386). The modest increase in cholesterol esterase activity
is not sufficient to cause the 5- to 20-fold increase in progesterone
secretion observed after treatment of SLC with LH (386).
Thus the acute steroidogenic effects of LH do not appear to be
modulated by acute changes in the three steroidogenic enzymes involved
in biosynthesis of progesterone. Therefore, it was suggested that LH
increases steroid production by facilitating transport of cholesterol
through the cell and to P-450scc (Fig.
5; Ref. 386). An attractive candidate for
LH regulation of progesterone secretion is the cholesterol transport
molecule StAR. Luteinizing hormone does not acutely (4-24 h) increase
mRNA encoding StAR in ovine luteal tissue (177). This was
not surprising, since results of early research indicated that the
acute increase in progesterone secretion observed after stimulation of
luteal tissue by tropic hormones was independent of transcription
(211). However, activation of PKA increases the amount of
StAR in the phosphorylated form and appears to stimulate transport of
cholesterol (11, 92, 291). Thus
phosphorylation of StAR with a resultant enhancement of cholesterol
transport appears to be a key step in acute hormonal stimulation of
progesterone synthesis (Fig. 6). Another
potential candidate that may play a role in LH-stimulated
progesterone production is the peripheral benzodiazepine receptor
(PBR)/endozepine system, which in other cell types is important for
steroid synthesis (271). To date, there has been little
research to examine the role of this system in luteal tissue. However,
evidence is accumulating that StAR and the PBR/endozepine system likely
interact in transporting cholesterol through the mitochondrial
membranes. Other proteins, such as the voltage-dependent anion
channel, may also be involved in this process (271).
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Addition of LH to SLC has also been shown to activate phospholipase C (PLC) and presumably protein kinase C (PKC) (reviewed in Davis et al., Ref. 74). Whether or not LH causes activation of PLC appears to depend on methodological and not species differences because LH has been found to activate (74) or not activate (390) the PLC/PKC second messenger system in ovine SLC. One obvious difference between these studies is the use of suspended versus plated cells. Even within the same laboratory, activation of PLC/PKC activity by LH is found in suspended but not plated cells (74). Thus the process of plating SLC appears to cause a loss of PLC/PKC activation by LH. Whether this is due to a change in the cells upon plating or to loss of cells found in SLC preparations that do not plate is unknown. Ovine SLC preparations are ~50% pure (105) and contain endothelial cells, which do not plate under standard plating conditions. Luteinizing hormone binding sites have been found on bovine endothelial cells (62). Therefore, it is interesting to speculate that LH may activate the PLC/PKC second messenger system preferentially in endothelial cells and the PKA second messenger system in small steroidogenic luteal cells. However, it is clear that pharmacological activation of PKA (forskolin) and PKC [phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)] in ovine small steroidogenic luteal cells has opposing actions on steroidogenesis (386). Thus having one hormone activate both second messenger systems in small steroidogenic luteal cells seems unlikely.
In nonhuman primates and pregnant or pseudopregnant rats, LLC in addition to SLC respond to LH with increases in progesterone secretion (43, 151, 245, 361). However, binding of LH to its receptor on LLC collected from ewes does not increase concentrations of intracellular cAMP, and addition of 8-bromo-cAMP or dibutyryl cAMP does not lead to increased secretion of progesterone (161). In addition, physiological concentrations of LH do not increase secretion of progesterone from human, bovine, or porcine LLC (6, 260, 361). However, these cells produce very high basal levels of progesterone (254), and it has been suggested that the PKA system may be constitutively activated in this cell type (161). Interestingly, it has been calculated that LLC produce >80% of total luteal progesterone secreted during the mid-luteal phase of the estrous cycle in the ewe (256). Thus understanding regulation of progesterone synthesis in this cell type is critical to allow manipulation of progesterone output from the corpus luteum.
2. Acute effects of GH and IGF-I on progesterone secretion
Both GH (202) and IGF-I (66, 82, 220, 274, 318) increased secretion of progesterone from luteal tissue. Receptors for GH or mRNA encoding GH receptor have been identified in ovine, bovine, and rat luteal tissue (53, 178, 204). Growth hormone could have a direct effect on luteal function through binding to its receptor and activation of the membrane-associated tyrosine kinase JAK2 (14). In support of this suggestion, perfusion of GH directly into the corpus luteum increased secretion of progesterone and oxytocin within 60 min (202). In addition, GH may influence luteal function indirectly by increasing expression of IGF-I, which is made by the corpus luteum of many species (mRNA and/or protein; Refs. 178, 259, 274, 281, 359). Indeed, in the ewe, GH supports IGF-I expression from luteal tissue (178). Receptors for IGF-I have been demonstrated in luteal tissues of several species including the cow, human, ewe, and rat (259, 274, 281, 318, 359). Insulin-like growth factor I is thought to activate intrinsic tyrosine kinase (58) in luteal cells, but the downstream effectors of activation of tyrosine kinase that lead to increased secretion of progesterone are not clearly understood. Binding of IGF-I stimulates phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate 1 and increases the activity of phosphoinositide 3-kinase. This kinase produces the novel phosphoinositide phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate, which may act as a second messenger (58). This substance appears to influence modification of the cytoskeleton and may be involved in prevention of cellular death. Therefore, IGF-I may acutely stimulate secretion of progesterone through modification of the cytoskeleton, while inhibition of cellular death may help maintain luteal weight (74, 204, 274). Where examined, both IGF-I and GH receptors were localized to LLC; thus GH and IGF-I may be important to maintain the high basal levels of progesterone secreted from these cells.
3. Acute stimulatory effects of prostaglandins on progesterone secretion
It has long been postulated that prostaglandins of the E and I series may be important for normal luteal function (137, 228, 229). These prostaglandins are produced in higher amounts in the early luteal phase than the late luteal phase and thus are proposed to play a role in luteal development (229). Strong evidence to support a role for PGI2 in luteal development was provided by an experiment by Homeida and El-Eknah (156), who demonstrated that oxytocin antagonist-induced delays in luteal development were due to suppression of PGI2 synthesis. Addition of PGI2 to luteal tissue from cows, ewes, and humans also increased secretion of progesterone (5, 33, 103, 106, 228). In humans, treatment of luteal cells with PGI2 was shown to increase cAMP accumulation, suggesting that PGI2 may increase secretion of progesterone through activation of PKA. However, in the ewe, both small and LLC responded to PGI2 with increases in progesterone secretion (103). Binding sites for PGI2 reside on both small and LLC (61, 62), which makes elevation of cAMP levels an unlikely mechanism for PGI2-induced increases in progesterone production in large cells due to the inability of cAMP to increase progesterone production in this cell type (103, 161). Thus the intracellular mechanism by which PGI2 increases secretion of progesterone is unclear.
Prostaglandin E2 also has been shown to increase progesterone production from luteal cells in cows and sheep (5, 103, 106, 328). In sheep, the majority of the high-affinity receptors for PGE2 are on LLC (105), and only LLC respond to PGE2 with increased secretion of progesterone (103). In early studies with bovine luteal tissue, addition of PGE2 increased levels of cAMP and presumably activated PKA (212). However, in purified preparations of ovine LLC, addition of PGE2 did not result in increased concentrations of cAMP or activation of adenylate cyclase (103). In addition, pharmacological activation of adenylate cyclase with forskolin did not increase secretion of progesterone from ovine LLC (103, 161). Thus it seems likely that binding of PGE2 to its receptor in LLC also activates some unknown effector system to increase progesterone synthesis. There are multiple types of receptors for PGE2 that are linked to different second messenger systems (244).
F. Mechanisms by Which Luteotropic Hormones Increase Secretion of Progesterone From Luteal Cells
In SLC of most species and LLC of rats and nonhuman primates, luteotropic hormones, such as LH and PGI2, dramatically increase progesterone synthesis by activation of PKA. Activation of PKA likely stimulates progesterone by increased transport of cholesterol to the P-450scc enzyme complex (386). In contrast, in LLC of ewes, pigs, cows, and humans, increased synthesis of progesterone in response to luteotropins such as PGI2, PGE2, GH, and IGF-I is not mediated through increased activation of PKA. This may be because PKA in these cells is constitutively activated, as suggested by their higher basal rate of progesterone production and higher concentration of cAMP (161). Stimulation of progesterone production in LLC appears limited, and the primary regulation of progesterone secretion in this cell type appears to be negative.
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V. LUTEOLYSIS |
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Luteolysis is defined as lysis or structural demise of the corpus
luteum. During normal luteolysis, two closely related events occur.
First, there is loss of the capacity to synthesize and secrete
progesterone (223) followed by loss of the cells that comprise the corpus luteum (187; reviewed in Pate, Ref. 276). In most
mammalian species, normal luteolysis is dependent on the presence of
the uterus. Hysterectomy of heifers (8, 209,
385), ewes (385), pigs (9),
guinea pigs (147), and many other species results in
delayed luteolysis. However, hysterectomy of primates does not result
in delayed luteolysis. Prostaglandin F2
is the factor
from the uterus that initiates luteolysis (138,
222) in most nonprimate species. On the basis of the
effects after partial hysterectomy and vascular anastomosis studies,
initiation of luteolysis by PGF2
in many species appears
to be a local effect between each uterine horn and its ipsilateral
ovary (75-78; reviewed in Ginther, Ref. 120). It has been postulated
that PGF2
enters the ovarian artery from the
utero-ovarian vein, via a countercurrent exchange mechanism
(reviewed in Ref. 120). This allows PGF2
to travel to
the ovarian artery without entering the pulmonary circulation where it
would be enzymatically inactivated in the lungs (285).
During luteal regression, initial decreases in concentrations of
progesterone in serum do not appear to be due to loss of steroidogenic
luteal cells, since numbers of luteal cells do not decrease until after
concentrations of progesterone in serum have decreased
(39). The decreased secretion of progesterone is most likely due to decreased luteal blood flow and decreased steroidogenic capacity of individual luteal cells. On day 15 of the
estrous cycle, concentrations of several mRNA, such as those encoding 3
-HSD and StAR, are highly variable between animals due to
differences in timing of the initiation of luteolysis. Thus evaluation
of the role played by specific mRNA in PGF2
-induced
decreases in synthesis of progesterone has been performed following use of exogenous PGF2
to ensure precise timing of the onset
of luteolysis.
One of the intriguing questions about luteolysis is, What is the signal
that initiates the release of PGF2
? It has been proposed
that estradiol from the developing preovulatory follicle triggers the
release of hypophysial oxytocin (221), which in turn
stimulates release of a small quantity of uterine PGF2
(97). Prostaglandin F2
then initiates a
positive-feedback loop involving release of additional luteal
oxytocin and PGF2
of both luteal (369) and
uterine origin (reviewed in Silvia et al., Ref. 336). Oxytocin
(157, 237, 377) stimulates
synthesis and secretion of PGF2
from the uterus of
guinea pigs (200), heifers (197,
308), mares (127), sows (186),
and ewes (376). It has recently been proposed that release
of luteal PGF2
amplifies the luteolytic signal in an
autocrine or paracrine manner (263, 369,
370).
A. Blood Flow and Vascular Changes
Many of the physiological, biochemical, and cellular facets of
PGF2
action on the corpus luteum have been characterized (Fig. 7). Prostaglandin F2
reduces blood flow to the corpus luteum and, thus, may cause
luteolysis by depriving the gland of nutrients, substrates for
steroidogenesis, and luteotropic support (284).
Administration of PGF2
to ewes reduced blood flow to the
corpus luteum in parallel to decreased secretion of progesterone
(246, 251). Because endothelial cells express
receptors for PGF2
(210),
PGF2
likely acts directly on this cell population.
Prostaglandin F2
causes degeneration of luteal endothelial cells (267, 321), resulting in a
marked reduction in capillary density (20,
39, 246), thereby reducing blood flow to the
luteal parenchyma. It appears that even relatively low levels of
PGF2
can induce apoptosis in luteal capillary endothelial cells (Juengel and Niswender, unpublished data).
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Recently, endothelin-1 has been implicated as a possible mediator of
the effects of PGF2
on luteal blood flow
(121, 122). Prostaglandin F2
stimulates endothelial cells of corpora lutea to produce endothelin-1
in vitro (122) and in vivo (262). In addition
to its potent vasoconstrictive activity (reviewed in Huggins et al.,
Ref. 162), endothelin-1 also inhibits the steroidogenic activity of
enriched populations of steroidogenic luteal cells (122).
In addition, endothelin-1 may reduce blood flow during early luteolysis
by causing arteriole constriction (262), and the resulting
hypoxia may cause release of additional endothelin-1
(296). The antiluteolytic properties of PGE2
(292) may, in part, be manifest in its ability to
attenuate the vasoconstrictive actions of endothelin-1
(335).
B. Morphological Changes
Prostaglandin F2
elicits a remarkable series of
morphological changes. The proportion of steroidogenic luteal cells
occupying the corpus luteum decreases within 24 h in ewes treated
with PGF2
in the midluteal phase (39). The
number of LLC that can be recovered from enzymatically dispersed
corpora lutea decreases, and this decrease precedes a decrease in the
number of small steroidogenic luteal cells (39). A
reduction in the size of LLC also occurs at this time (39,
118).
In steroidogenic luteal cells (small and large, collectively),
morphological changes do not become evident until 24-36 h after exposure to PGF2
(321), although the
steroidogenic capacity of the cells is markedly reduced by this time.
Interestingly, endothelial cells in capillaries of corpora lutea from
ewes treated with PGF2
are the first population of cells
to exhibit dramatic morphological changes (321) that are
indicative of apoptosis (185). It is suspected that
degeneration of endothelial cells is a direct effect of
PGF2
, but this has not been proven.
C. Intracellular Signaling
Prostaglandin F2
acts by binding to specific
receptors localized to large steroidogenic luteal cells (Fig. 4; Refs.
105, 180). These receptors belong to the seven-transmembrane family of G protein-coupled receptors (2, 128,
316, 356). Upon binding to high-affinity
receptors, PGF2
induces activation of membrane-bound
PLC (35) via a stimulatory G protein (231). Phospholipase C catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate to inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)
(73) and 1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG) (35).
Increased cytosolic concentrations of IP3 result in the
release of free Ca2+ from the smooth endoplasmic reticulum
to the cytoplasmic compartment (35). Increased free
Ca2+ and DAG (localized to the plasma membrane) stimulate
the catalytic activity of Ca2+-dependent protein kinase
(PKC; also localized to the plasma membrane; Ref. 247).
Protein kinase C refers to a family of serine/threonine protein kinases
(248) that exists in 11 isoforms identified to date (reviewed in Quest, Ref. 294). Differences among isoforms include subcellular localization and Ca2+ dependence
(294). The
- (cytosolic) and
-isoforms (plasma membrane) of PKC are immunochemically detectable in the bovine corpus
luteum (266), whereas the
-isoform is the predominant form in the corpus luteum of pseudopregnant rats (71).
Protein kinase C-
is calcium dependent, whereas PKC-
and PKC-
are not calcium dependent (249). Both
calcium-dependent and calcium-independent isoforms of PKC
contain highly-conserved, cysteine-rich domains involved in binding
of DAG and pharmacological activators of PKC such as PMA
(32). Translocation of PKC-
from the cytosol to the
nucleus is stimulated by phorbol esters in some cell types (88, 199, 363). The array of
isoforms, their subcellular distribution, and their roles in the
regulation of the corpus luteum have received little attention to date.
Protein kinase C is believed to mediate many of the antisteroidogenic
actions of PGF2
in LLC (Fig. 4; Refs. 223, 387, 388). In
support of this view, purified LLC cultured with PGF2
exhibit an influx of extracellular Ca2+ to the cytosolic
compartment similar to the influx observed in response to A-23187 (a
Ca2+ ionophore; Ref. 389). Prostaglandin
F2
-induced accumulation of microsomally derived and
extracellularly derived Ca2+ in the cytosolic compartment
enhances the catalytic activity of PKC. Activation of PKC in LLC is
believed to result in posttranslational modification of cellular
proteins involved in steroidogenesis (223,
387), cholesterol availability (29), and
maintenance of the extracellular matrix (392; reviewed in Lum and
Malik, Ref. 206). Although there is pharmacological activation of PKC
in the corpus luteum under conditions that dramatically decrease steroidogenesis, such activation does not cause apoptosis
(223). Activation of PKC induces expression and activation
of proteins involved in apoptosis in other cell types (reviewed in
Schwartzman and Cidlowski, Ref. 325). It is possible that apoptosis in
LLC is facilitated by PKC activation.
D. Luteal PGF2
Prostaglandin F2
can be synthesized by corpora
lutea of women (279, 333, 358; reviewed in Mitchell et al., Ref. 230), sows (133), ewes (303, 369),
cows (275), and rodents (263). During the
late luteal phase of the estrous cycle, PGF2
from peripheral sources can stimulate synthesis of PGF2
in
corpora lutea of ewes (369).
In contrast to ruminants, luteolysis in primates is not mediated
by uterine PGF2
(31). However, it has been
proposed that PGF2
produced locally in the corpus luteum
acts via a paracrine and/or autocrine mechanism to induce luteolysis
(19). Whether PGF2
is responsible for
luteolysis and its source remain controversial. Prostaglandins
F2
and E2 are synthesized using membrane
phospholipids as substrate in a three-step series of reactions
termed the cyclooxygenase pathway. Phospholipases A2 and C,
localized to the plasma membrane, hydrolyze membrane phospholipids,
liberating arachidonic acid that can be utilized as substrate for
PGF2
synthesis (184). Cyclooxygenase
(prostaglandin G/H synthase) catalyzes the rate-limiting step in
prostaglandin biosynthesis, which is conversion of arachidonic acid to
PGH2 (reviewed in Dewitt and Smith, Ref. 83). Finally,
PGH2 is rapidly converted to PGF2
by
prostaglandin F synthase (380).
Phospholipases A2 and C exhibit increased enzymatic
activity in the presence of elevated intracellular free
Ca2+ (1, 109). The ovine corpus
luteum expresses cyclooxygenase in response to PGF2
(369). However, PGF2
downregulates mRNA
encoding cyclooxygenase in the bovine corpus luteum early in the
estrous cycle (370). This period coincides with a time when PGF2
cannot cause luteolysis, suggesting local
synthesis of PGF2
may be important in this process.
These observations support the notion that PGF2
can
autoregulate its synthesis by stimulating the liberation of arachidonic
acid by hydrolysis of membrane phospholipids as a result of
1) PGF2
receptor-coupled G protein
activation of phospholipase C, and conversion of arachidonic acid to
PGH2, and 2) increased cytosolic
Ca2+. Availability of arachidonic acid and cyclooxygenase
activity, which determine a cell's capacity to synthesize
prostaglandins, are both increased in the corpus luteum in response to
PGF2
.
E. PGF2
Inhibition of Progesterone Synthesis
Prostaglandin F2
decreases luteal synthesis of
progesterone in cows, ewes, sows, monkeys, humans, and
pseudopregnant/pregnant rats and rabbits in vivo (reviewed in Niswender
and Nett, Ref. 254). However, the negative effects of
PGF2
on luteal progesterone secretion in vitro have been
more difficult to demonstrate and require appropriate culture
conditions. If luteal cells from the mid to late luteal phase are
supplied with lipoproteins as a source of cholesterol which enhances
the secretion of progesterone, treatment with PGF2
results in decreased synthesis and secretion of progesterone
(104, 278, 288,
388, 397). There are likely multiple
mechanisms by which PGF2
decreases synthesis of progesterone; however, because PGF2
decreases
progesterone secretion from purified preparations of ovine and bovine
LLC (388), it is clear that PGF2
directly
influences these cells (Fig. 5). Prostaglandin F2
could
decrease progesterone synthesis by a number of intracellular
mechanisms, including 1) downregulation of receptors for
luteotropic hormones, 2) decreased cellular uptake of
cholesterol, 3) decreased transport of cholesterol through the cell and/or across the mitochondrial membranes, and 4)
decreased activity of the steroidogenic enzymes required for
biosynthesis of progesterone.
1. Effects of PGF2
on receptors for
luteotropic hormones
Because normal rates of synthesis of progesterone are dependent on
luteotropic hormones, PGF2